France Link

Napoleon's 'suicide' pistols fetch 1.69m euros

Two of emperor Napoleon Bonaparte's pistols, one of which he intended to use to commit suicide after a military defeat but was prevented from doing so by his grand squire, were sold at an auction in Fontainebleau at the weekend for 1.69 million euros. 

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

Two pistols owned by the French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, with which he once intended to kill himself, have been sold at auction for 1.69 million euros, reports BBC News.

The weapons, which were created by the Paris gunmaker Louis-Marin Gosset, had been expected to fetch between 1.2 million euros and 1.5 million euros.

They were sold at the Osenat auction house on Sunday - next to the Fontainebleau palace where Napoleon tried to take his own life following his abdication in 1814.

The pistols' sale comes after France's culture ministry recently classified them as national treasures and banned their export.

This means the French government now has 30 months to make a purchase offer to the new owner, who has not been named. It also means the pistols can only leave France temporarily.

The guns are inlaid with gold and silver, and feature an engraved image of Napoleon himself in profile.

He was said to have wanted to use them to kill himself on the night of 12 April, 1814 after the defeat of his army by foreign forces meant he had to give up power.

However, his grand squire Armand de Caulaincourt removed the powder from the guns and Napoleon instead took poison but survived.

Read more of this report from BBC News.