Skip navigation
London Review of Books London Review Bookshop

De Gaulle’s Debt subscriber-only content

Patrice Higonnet

  • Jean Moulin: Le politique, le rebelle, le résistant by Jean-Pierre Azéma

By 1995, there were 37 monuments and 113 plaques dedicated to Jean Moulin in France; 978 boulevards, avenues, streets, squares, bridges and stadiums were named after him, as well as more than 365 schools, including one university. There are even more today; only de Gaulle is more honoured. And yet at the time of his death at the hands of Nazi torturers in the first days of July 1943, Moulin was unknown even among the elite circles of the day. In all likelihood, Pétain and even Laval had little idea who he was. To no other man, however – apart from Churchill – did de Gaulle owe so much, as that excessively immodest man fully understood, just as no one, apart from de Gaulle himself, did more to frustrate Franklin Roosevelt’s determination not just to liberate France in June 1944, but to occupy and administer it until some government presumably favourable to the US emerged from its ruins. By what he had done – and because of his untimely death, what was left undone – Moulin made a lasting mark on French history, greater than he himself could ever have anticipated.

subscriber-only content Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.

Patrice Higonnet’s Paris, Capital of the World is published by Harvard.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

Land of Pure Delight
Dinah Birch: Anglicising the Holy Land

The G-Word
Mark Mazower on the Armenian Massacres

Screaming in the Castle
Charles Nicholl on the story of Beatrice Cenci

Secret Signals in Lotus Flowers
Maya Jasanoff: Myths of the Mutiny

Sinking the ‘Bismarck’
Lawrence Hogben follows the chase