Emeric Bergeaud

Stella


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himself emperor of the first Haitian Empire. Dessalines drew much opposition as a ruler; two years later he was assassinated. In 1810, after his death and a subsequent civil war, Dessalines’s assistants-turned-rivals Henri Christophe (1767–1820) and Alexandre Sabès Pétion (1770–1818) split the country into two. Christophe, a former slave who fought against the British at the 1779 Battle of Savannah, headed the State—later the Kingdom—of Haiti in the North (including Artibonite) from Cap-Haïtien. There, he maintained a system of forced labor which Bergeaud highly criticizes in Stella, one that was instituted by Dessalines and Toussaint Louverture before him; it centered on the cultivation of sugar and coffee for export. In the South and West regions, Pétion, a man of Euro-African descent who had trained at a military school in Paris, led the Republic of Haiti from its capital, Port-au-Prince. Pétion embarked on a program of distributing the land of the former sugar and coffee plantations to the local peasants and soldiers; this created a system of subsistence smallholdings, the products of which Pétion taxed heavily.10 In both territories, the gap between the wealthier, city-dwelling Euro-African elite and the poorer African-descended peasants widened. Opposition groups emerged in both areas, and each country established a strong military presence to maintain a tense peace. Within a few years, an additional two regions proclaimed independence. By the time of Bergeaud’s birth in 1818, Haiti had effectively shattered into four separate countries. Early in the century, the future of the new nation was unclear, and both France and the United States—and to a lesser extent, Great Britain—were ready to capitalize on any real or perceived weaknesses.11 Furthermore, not one of these countries recognized Haiti as officially independent from France.

      When Pétion died from yellow fever in 1818, his protégé Boyer became president. During his first few years in office, Boyer worked to reunite the fractured nation and to bring its separate regions under centralized control, both physically and legislatively. When Christophe died in 1820, Boyer rejoined the Kingdom of Haiti to the Republic, extending Pétion’s practice of land redistribution to the North. Just as it had in the South and West, this policy—later enshrined in law in the 1826 Rural Code—ensured that, while able to survive, the peasant classes would have little chance of amassing sustained political power. In 1822, Boyer’s forces invaded the eastern half of Hispaniola (the current-day Dominican Republic), and Haitian forces occupied this part of the island until 1844.

      Story and History

      Stella begins with the story of two brothers, Romulus and Remus; one is born of an African