Marie-Jeanne Bécu (Madame du Barry)
Born illegitimate, Marie-Jeanne was the daughter of a
seamstress named Anne Bécu. Her father was suspected to be a local friar
who funded her education in a convent. She moved to Paris at the age of
fifteen to work as a shop assistant, where she caught the attention of
nobleman Jean du Barry. As his mistress, Marie-Jeanne was introduced
into high society as a courtesan. Seeing her potential to rise to become
the royal mistress of King Louis XV but lacking a respectable title in
order to qualify for such a position, she was granted such credentials
when her marriage was arranged to Jean's brother, the Count Guillaume du
Barry and became Countess du Barry.
While she did serve as the King's courtesan , she did
not have the popularity or influence as her predecessor, the famous
Madame de Pompadour. Her relationship with Marie Antoinette (then the
dauphine of France) was not good, and she refused to speak of Madame du
Barry. Upon King Louis XV's death in 1774, she was banished from
court.
In 1792 she was arrested by the Revolutionary Tribunal in Paris and
charged with treason. Found guilty of counter-revolutionary activities,
she faced the scaffold on Dec. 8, 1793. Reportedly she did
not die with dignity, but rather screamed and pleaded for mercy from the
jeering crowd and had to be dragged to the guillotine.