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  1. Suzanne Simone Baptiste Louverture (around 1742 – May 19, 1816 in Agen, France) was the wife of Toussaint Louverture and the "Dame-Consort" of the French colony of Saint-Domingue.

  2. 2. März 2020 · Suzanne Simone Baptiste Louverture (1742?-1816), the wife of Toussaint Louverture (1743?-1803), was arrested with her husband during the Haitian revolution in 1802. Napoleon Bonaparte sent General Charles Leclerc to apprehend Louverture and deport him to the French Alps.

  3. Suzanne Simon-Baptiste, ou Suzanne Louverture (1752-1816), est l'épouse du général Toussaint Louverture, gouverneur-général de la colonie française de Saint-Domingue. Lorsque celui-ci se proclama gouverneur-général à vie en 1797, elle occupa un rôle identique à celui de « Première dame ».

    • Vers 1752, Bréda Cap-Français
  4. Robin’s forthcoming book will be the first biography of Suzanne Simone Baptiste, also known as Madame Toussaint Louverture, a heretofore neglected yet influential figure in the history of Blackness in Europe. This biography will be published with Princeton University Press.

  5. Suzanne Simone Baptiste Louverture (born around 1742 - May 19, 1816 Agen, France) was the wife of Toussaint Louverture. Some sources claim she might have been a relative (perhaps a niece) of Pierre Baptiste, Toussaint's father or godfather. A strong family woman, she was fiercely loyal to and deeply in love with Toussaint.

  6. 6. Juni 2020 · Close to the end of the decade, Toussaint had become partnered with an enslaved woman named Suzanne Simon-Baptiste, who had at least one child, Placide, from a previous relationship. Louverture and Suzanne would go on to have two children together, Isaac and Saint-Jean, the latter of whom was born in 1791, the year the Revolution ...

  7. As part of a directed research project, we investigated the types of propaganda surrounding the alleged torture in 1804 of Suzanne Simone Baptiste – also known as Madame Toussaint Louverture – in Britain and France. Almost nothing has been written about Suzanne until a copy of a letter was published anonymously in London’s anti-slavery ...