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Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette, is remembered as the young French aristocrat who crossed the Atlantic to fight for American independence. But his life was far more complex than the familiar legend of Washington's beloved volunteer.
At nineteen, Lafayette defied his family, his king, and the expectations of his class to join the American Revolution. He came in search of glory, but the war gave him something deeper: blood at Brandywine, hardship at Valley Forge, Washington's trust, and a role as the living bridge between America's desperate army and the power of France.
In America, Lafayette's ideals seemed to find their proof. French ships, French troops, American endurance, and Washington's command converged at Yorktown, turning his youthful gamble into lasting fame. He became the noble foreign friend of liberty, the adopted son of the American Revolution, and later the Nation's Guest welcomed back by a grateful republic.
But France gave Lafayette a harsher education. He brought the language of liberty home and tried to guide the French Revolution toward constitutional order. As commander of the National Guard, he hoped to reconcile king, nation, law, and people. Instead, he faced royal mistrust, popular anger, radical suspicion, the Champ de Mars, flight, imprisonment, Napoleon's rise, Bourbon restoration, and one final revolution in 1830.
LAFAYETTE: The Young Marquis and the Two Revolutions tells the story of a man who tried to make liberty honourable, lawful, and humane across two worlds. Brave, vain, generous, flawed, and persistent, Lafayette became a hero not because he always won, but because he kept returning to liberty after liberty had disappointed him.
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