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Lord Grenville and the 'smoking gun'’: The plot to assinate the French directory in 1798–1799 reconsidered
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Lord Grenville and the 'smoking gun'’: The plot to assinate the French directory in 1798–1799 reconsidered

M. Durey
The Historical Journal, Vol.45(3), pp.547-568
2002
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Abstract

This article re-examines the evidence that has been used to claim that, in the aftermath of the collapse of the British secret service's counter-revolutionary plans in France in September 1797, foreign secretary Lord Grenville supported a French royalist plot to assassinate the Directory. It concludes that, although his agent James Talbot was actively involved and probably thought he had official permission to proceed, Grenville remained ignorant of the plot until December 1798. He subsequently ordered Talbot to withdraw from the conspiracy. Emphasis is placed on communications difficulties associated with undercover secret service activities in this era and on bureaucratic failures within the foreign office, together with evidence to suggest that Talbot was temperamentally unsuited to the role of intelligence officer.

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Citation topics
10 Arts & Humanities
10.144 Modern History
10.144.1884 French Revolution
Web Of Science research areas
History
ESI research areas
Social Sciences, general
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