Henri de Fleury de Coulan, Sieur de Buat, St Sire et La Forest de Gay (died October 11, 1666) was a captain of horse in the army of the Dutch Republic, who became embroiled in a celebrated conspiracy during the First Stadtholderless Period to overthrow the regime of Grand Pensionary Johan de Witt in favor of future Stadtholder William III, known as the Buat Conspiracy. He was convicted of treason in 1666 and executed.
The conspiracy was romanticized in the novel "Elisabeth Musch" (1850), by Jacob van Lennep
The Dutch poet Constantijn Huygens wrote the following epitaph
- OP BUAT, ONTHOOFT II. OCT. 1666. EX LATINO MEO
- Hier light een schuldigh man, van Hooft en Hals berooft,
- Die, doen hij schuldigh weird, een’ hals had, maer geen hooft.
which may be translated as:
- Here lies a guilty man, deprived of head and neck,
- who, when he became guilty, did have a neck, but not a head
Ritmeester Buat (1968) was a Dutch TV series with actor Coen Flink in the role of Buat
Famous quotes containing the word henri:
“If I meet the Christian Deity, I am lost: He is a tyrant and as such, is full of ideas of vengeance; His Bible speaks of nothing but fearful punishments. I never loved Him! I could never even believe that anyone did love Him sincerely. He is devoid of pity.... He will punish me in some abominable manner.”
—Stendhal [Marie Henri Beyle] (17831842)