Anne Pépin
Anne Pépin (1747–1837), was a signara.[1] She belonged to the more famous of the so-called signare on the island Gorée in French Senegal, and was known for her relationship with the then governor Stanislas de Boufflers. She was a leading person in the signare community and one of their most known historical representatives.
Life
Anne Pépin was the daughter of the signara Catherine Baudet and the Frenchman Jean Pépin and sister of Nicolas Pepin. She belonged to the leading figures of the signara community on Gorée, which played in important part of the French slave trade. Her brother had the famous Maison des Esclaves built for the family slave trade business on the island, typically constructed for a signara house with localities for the storage of slaves in the basement.
Anne Pépin herself owned and constructed several slave trade houses of the same kind, among them a famous house built in a mixed Italo-Provence-style. As other signaras she would have participated in the slave trade, but she is also known to have traded in Gum arabic, which was officially banned but unofficially condoned by the French.
She is famously known for being the signara-mistress of Stanislas de Boufflers, who was the French governor in 1786-1787. Whether they actually had a sexual relationship is not confirmed. The relationship between a Frenchman and a signara did not exclusively signify a sexual union, but the signara and her slaves provided her French client with housing and domestic services such as washing. Stanislas de Boufflers may have lived in her house, and she functioned as his hostess on several famous festivities.
She should not be confused with her niece, Anna Colas Pépin, who became known for a similar relationship with François d'Orléans, Prince of Joinville.
Legacy
Anne Pépin appears in Segu, an historical novel written by Maryse Condé, under the stereotypical traits of the beautiful aspiring noble lady but neglected signare. She makes her first appearance in chapter 9, part I:
As she lay on a mat on the balcony of her house on Gorée Island, Anne Pépin felt bored. She had been bored for ten years, ever since her lover, the Chevalier de Boufflers, who had been governor of the island, went back to France. He had amassed enough money to marry his fair friend the Comtesse de Sabran; Anne still lay awake at night thinking about his ingratitude. She couldn't forget that a few months she had ridden high - given parties, masked balls and theatrical entertainments like those at the court of the king of France. But now it was all over and here she was, abandoned on his chunk of basalt dumped in the sea off Cape Verde, the only French settlement in Africa apart from Saint-Louis at the mouth of the Senegal River.[2]
Notes
Sources
- Jean Luc Angrand, Céleste ou le temps des Signares, Éditions Anne Pépin.
- Guillaume Vial, Les signares à Saint-Louis du Sénégal au xixe siècle: étude critique d'une identité métisse, Université de Reims, 2 vols, Mémoire de maîtrise, 1997, 407 pp.
- Lorelle Semley, To be Free and French: Citizenship in France's Atlantic Empire
- Mark Hinchman, Portrait of an Island: The Architecture and Material Culture of Gorée ...
- Joseph Roger de Benoist et Abdoulaye Camara, « Les signares et le patrimoine bâti de l'île », dans Abdoulaye Camara & Joseph Roger de Benoist, Histoire de Gorée, Maisonneuve & Larose, 2003