Le Triumvirat

Le Triumvirat
Original titleOctavian et le jeune Pompée ou le Triumvirat
Written byVoltaire
Date premiered5 July 1764
Original languageFrench
Original run1764-1764
SubjectSecond Triumvirate, Sextus Pompey
GenreTragedy
SettingRoman Republic

Octavian et le jeune Pompée ou le Triumvirat (better known simply as Le Triumvirat) is a tragedy in five acts written by Voltaire in 1763. The play was premiered on 5 July 1764 and the script was published in 1766. It's plot centers around the Second Triumvirate's conflict with Sextus Pompey and mainly focuses on the ill that happens to the women in the lives of the men involved in the conflict.

Voltaire wrote an essay named "Des conspirations contre les peuples, ou des proscriptions" (Concerning conspiracies against peoples, or proscriptions) as an editorial suppliment to the play.[1]

Characters

Premiere and reception

The play premiered on July 5 1764 at the Comédie-Française and was met with a negative reception. The play flopping had been feared in advance by several parties, including Voltaire and the theater company, Comédie-Française had been reluctant to produce the play. It closed after four performances. The play is considered to be Voltaire's only "complete failure" at the French stage.[3][4]

Art

Danish painter Nicolai Abildgaard painted several scenes from the play.[5] Four of these paintings are held in a room at the Frisch House in Copenhagen. These paintings were regarded as quite politically charged.[6]

References

  1. ^ Volatire (2024). Sackerson, Julien (ed.). Conspiracies Against the People. Marchen Press. p. 9. ISBN 9783989882317.
  2. ^ The Oxford Companion to French Literature. 1959. p. 720.
  3. ^ Pearson, Roger (2008). Voltaire Almighty. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 317. ISBN 9781596918771.
  4. ^ LeClerc, Paul O. (1973). Voltaire and Crébillon Père: History of an Enmity. Voltaire Foundation. pp. 119, 133–134.
  5. ^ Monrad, Kasper; Conisbee, Philip (1993). The Golden Age of Danish Painting. Hudson Hills Press. p. 51. ISBN 9781555950866.
  6. ^ "A SET OF FOUR NEO-CLASSICAL PAINTINGS BY TIARKO CRAMER [1780-1812], THE ALLEGORICAL DESIGNS CONCEIVED BY NICOLAI ABILDGAARD". Carlton Hobbs LLC. Retrieved 2026-02-13.