Levasseur returned to practising as a surgeon during the Directory, Consulate and Empire (1795–1814). He went into exile during the Bourbon Restoration, returning to France for the Hundred Days (1815) and again after the July Revolution of 1830. He died in Le Mans. Four volumes of memoirs were published under his name (1829–1831) which were prosecuted for offending the monarchy and religion. At the trial, Achille Roche, putative editor of the memoirs, was regarded as the author. Karl Marx read the memoirs for a planned history of the convention.
Legacy
Levasseur is commemorated in Le Mans by boulevard René Levasseur, and an obelisk in the main cemetery visited in 1943 by Ernst Jünger.[2] A bronze statue erected in 1911 was melted down in World War Two to reuse the metal.[3] Sarthe departmental archives marked the 220th anniversary of the abolition of slavery with an exhibition on Levasseur.[4]
Bibliography
Dissertation sur la Symphyséotomie et sur l’enclavement, Bruxelles, 1822
^Chronicle of the French Revolution, Longman (1989), p. 473.
^Jünger, Ernst (1995). Bourgois, Christian (ed.). journal III, 1943–1945. Second journal parisien (in French). Paris. p. 128. ISBN2-267-01303-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link); Bertin, Serge (2009). Le territoire partagé; guide des cimetières de la Sarthe (in French). Le Mans: Cénomane. p. 123. ISBN978-2-916329-17-8.