Liese Sherwood-Fabre and Sherlock Holmes’ French Connection

I’m excited to have Liese back with more Sherlock Holmes tidbits!!! I have my own book, Duchess of Mine, where my heroine, Gabby, is a bit of a nut for Sherlock. So, I read these tidbits with much enthusiasm. Here’s some music for you to enjoy while reading through*, and now…here’s Liese!


Sherlock Holmes’ French Connectiongree-gr


In The Greek Interpreter, Sherlock Holmes gives two clues of his past. In addition to noting his ancestors were country squires, he also shares that art was in his blood, given his grandmother was the sister of Vernet, the French artist.


 


Vernet,_Claude_Joseph_-_Seaport_by_Moonlight_-_1771

Claude Joseph Vernet’s Seaport by Moonlight, 1771


Some speculation exists as to which Vernet. Three generations of Vernets garnered patronage from both the French monarchy and Napoleon: Claude-Joseph Vernet (1714 – 1789); Antoine Charles Horace Vernet, known as Carle Vernet (1758 – 1836); and Émile Jean-Horace Vernet, known as Horace Vernet (1789 – 1863) . Simple mathematics suggests the most logical choice would be the youngest Vernet. For Sherlock and Mycroft’s mother to be between twenty and twenty-five at marriage, she would have to have been born between 1821-1826. Taking another twenty to twenty-five years or so for Sherlock’s grandmother to be born, means a birth date of about 1795 – 1800 or earlier, clearly putting her as a contemporary of Horace.


Napoleon_in_Battle_of_Moskowa_by_Vernet

Antoine Vernet’s Napoleon in Battle of Moscow


In reality, Horace Vernet had one sister: Camille Françoise Joséphine (1788-1858) who married the French painter Hippolyte Lecomte (1781-1857) and whose son, Charles Emile Hippolyte Lecomte-Vernet, was also a painter.


An_Algerian_Lady_Hawking

Horace Vernet’s An Algerian Lady Hawking


Obviously, Doyle could not have selected a better family than the Vernet dynasty to provide Sherlock his inherited artistic tendencies. Claude-Joseph was known for his landscapes and seascapes; Carle for his realistic horses, based on his own knowledge as an expert horseman; and Horace for portraits and realistic battle scenes. A little research also supplies some interesting facts for additional color in Sherlock’s “ancestry.” Horace Vernet was born in the Louvre, and his father, fleeing with his wife and children, barely escaped being shot during the French Revolution. Horace was also known for having an incredible memory, able to sketch a scene or face seen only once with total recall.


The Vernet family had an English connection as well. Claude-Joseph married an English woman, Virginia Parker, during his time in Italy, and British visitors on the Grand Tour were his most loyal patrons. It might have this British link that provided the basis for selecting the Vernet family for Sherlock’s artistic inheritance, but his great-uncle’s ability to remember a location years later seems quite Holmesian as well.


[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_Joseph_Vernet


[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hippolyte_Lecomte


[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_Joseph_Vernet


[4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carle_Vernet


[5] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horace_Vernet


[6] David Bartlet, Paris with Pen and Pencil


[7] http://www.philamuseum.org/collections/biography/16017.html


*Music composed by Adrian von Ziegler

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Published on May 20, 2015 19:11
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