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See also: political adventurer, famous for the supposed mystery of his sex, was See also: born near See also: Tonnerre in See also: Burgundy, on the 7th of See also: October 1728
.
He was the son of an advocate of See also: good position, and after a distinguished course of study at the See also: College See also: Mazarin he became a See also: doctor of See also: law by See also: special See also: dispensation before the usual age, and adopted his See also: father's profession
.
He
began See also: literary See also: work as a contributor to Freron's Annee litteraire, and attracted See also: notice as a political writer by two See also: works on See also: financial and administrative questions, which he published in his twenty-fifth See also: year
.
His reputation increased so rapidly that in 1755 he was, on the recommendation of See also: Louis
See also: Francois, See also: prince of See also: Conti, entrusted by Louis XV
.
(who had originally started his " secret " See also: foreign policy—i.e. by undisclosed agents behind the backs of his ministers—in favour of the prince of Conti's ambition to be See also: king of Poland) with a secret
See also: mission to the See also: court of See also: Russia
.
It was on this occasion that he is said for the first See also: time to have assumed the dress of a woman, with the connivance, it is sup-posed, of the French court.' In this disguise he obtained the See also: appointment of reader to the empress See also: Elizabeth, and won her over entirely to the views of his royal master, with whom he maintained a secret
See also: correspondence during the whole of his See also: diplomatic career
.
After a year's See also: absence he returned to See also: Paris to be immediately charged with a second mission to St See also: Petersburg, in which he figured in his true sex, and as See also: brother of the reader who had been at the See also: Russian court the year before
.
He played an important See also: part in the negotiations between the courts of Russia, See also: Austria and See also: France during the Seven Years' War
.
For these diplomatic services he was rewarded with the decoration of the See also: grand See also: cross of St Louis
.
In 1759 he served with the French army on the Rhine as aide-de-See also: camp to the marshal de See also: Broglie, and was wounded during the See also: campaign
.
He had held for some years previously a commission in a regiment of dragoons, and was distinguished for his skill in military exercises, particularly in See also: fencing
.
In 1762, on the return of the duc de Nivernais, d'Eon, who had been secretary to his See also: embassy, was appointed his successor, first as See also: resident See also: agent and then as See also: minister plenipotentiary at the court of See also: Great Britain
.
He had not been long in this position when he lost the favour of hisSee also: sovereign, chiefly, according to his own account, through the adverse influence of Madame de Pompadour, who was jealous of him as a secret correspondent of the king
.
Superseded by count de Guerchy, d'Eon showed his irritation by denying the genuineness of the letter of appointment, and by raising an See also: action against Guerchy for an attempt to See also: poison him
.
Guerchy, on the other See also: hand, had previously commenced an action against d'Eon for See also: libel,' founded on the publication by the latter of certain See also: state documents of which he had possession in his official capacity
.
Both parties succeeded in so far as a true See also: bill was found against Guerchy for the attempt to See also: murder, though by See also: pleading his See also: privilege as ambassador he escaped. a trial, and d'Eon was found guilty of the libel
.
Failing to come up for See also: judgment when called on, he was outlawed
.
For some years afterwards he lived in obscurity, appearing in public chiefly at fencing matches
.
During this See also: period rumours as to the sex of d'Eon, originating probably in the See also: story of his first residence at St Petersburg as a See also: female, began to excite public See also: interest
.
In 1774 he published at See also: Amsterdam a See also: book called See also: Les Loisirs du Chevalier d'Eon, which stimulated gossip
.
Bets were frequently laid on the subject, and an action raised before See also: Lord Mansfield in 1977 for the recovery of one of these bets brought the question to a judicial decision, by which d'Eon was declared a female
.
A See also: month after the trial he returned to France, having received permission to do so as the result of negotiations in which Beaumarchais was employed as agent
.
The conditions were that he was to deliver up certain state documents in his possession, and to See also: wear the dress of a female
.
The reason for the latter of these stipulations has never been clearly explained, but he complied with it to the close of his See also: life
.
In 1784 he received permission to visit See also: London for the purpose of bringing back his library and other See also: property
.
He did not, however, return to France, though after the Revolution he sent a letter, using the name of Madame d'Eon, in which he offered to serve in the republican army
.
He continued to dress as a lady, and took part in fencing matches with success, though at last in 1996 he was badly hurt in one
.
He died in London on the 22nd of May 181o
.
During the closing years of his life he is said to have enjoyed a small pension from See also: George III
.
But see Lang's See also: Historical Mysteries, pp
.
241-242, where this traditional account is discussed and rejected.665
A See also: post-mortem examination of the See also: body conclusively established the fact that d'Eon was a See also: man
.
The best See also: modern accounts are in the duc de Broglie's Le Secret du roi (1888); Captain J
.
Buchan Telfer's See also: Strange Career of the Chevalier d'Eon (1888); Octave Homberg and Fernand Jousselin, Le Chevalier d'Eon (1904) ; and A
.
Lang's Historical Mysteries (1904)
.
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