On the last day of May in 1729, the French outlaw Philippe Nivet was put to death in Paris.
Although some at the time considered that the legendary bandit Cartouche (executed in 1721) was “nothing as compared to Nivet,” it is Cartouche only whom time has remembered.
Nivet — “Fanfaron” by his pseudonym — was nothing to his predecessor when it came to the romance of the road, a consideration understandably overlooked by contemporaries who had their own pocketbooks to consider. To such men, Nivet loomed very large indeed.
Commanding a sophisticated Paris-based network of highwaymen, fences, and safe houses, Nivet was slated with 38 armed robberies from 1723 to 1728, six of them resulting in fatalities — including his last.
Nivet’s final highway robbery victimized Louis David and his wife, dry-goods merchants of Amiens. In August 1728 the couple were returning home, mounted on fine horses, from the Guibray fair where they had done a large volume of business. Nivet and two accomplices joined the Davids and, posing as merchants themselves, accompanied them to a forest near Rouen. Once in the forest, these bandits slit the Davids’ throats, stole their considerable money and jewelry, and rode immediately to the home of a receiver where they broke down the couple’s jewelry to render it unrecognizable. Then, to frustrate pursuers, Nivet and his men secured new mounts from an accomplice who ran a livery stable and rode to Vernon, where they again changed transport by boarding the postal coach for Paris. (Source)
Despite his precautions, Nivet was captured by chance in Paris: bad luck for him on this specific occasion but a mischance asymptotically approaching certainty over the extent of his prolific career. Fanfaron had several months in prison informing on his band — the arrests ran to 68 — before being broken on the wheel. As with Cartouche eight years before, every window opening on the Place de Greve, and every stone of the square itself, was crowded with gawkers.
There’s a short French-language biography from that period that can be purchased online. (There’s a wee summary here.)
On this day..
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- 1431: Beaumont and Vivonne
- 1996: Four militants, ahead of the Khobar Towers bombing
- 1509: Four Dominicans for the Jetzer affair
- 1915: Kassim Ismail Mansoor, purveyor of coffee and treason
- 2000: Robert Earl Carter, exonerating Anthony Graves
- 1793: Ezra Mead, "in one of these fits of insanity"
- 1928: Frederick Browne and Pat Kennedy, hanged by a microscope
- 1841: Marius Darmes, frustrated regicide
- 1622: Not quite Squanto (Tisquantum), Pilgrim befriender
- 1076: Waltheof II, Earl of Northumbria
- 1718: John "Jack Ketch" Price, former hangman