Marguerite Charlotte Pécoul


Charlotte David or Marguerite-Charlotte Pécoul was the French wife of the painter Jacques-Louis David.
She was born in Paris to Charles-Pierre Pécoul, the superintendent of Royal buildings, and his wife Marie-Louise, née l'Alouette.
Marguerite-Charlotte was roughly half the age of her husband when they married on 16 May 1782. They had four children: Charles Louis Jules David, François Eugène David, and the twin daughters Laure Émilie Félicité David and Pauline Jeanne David.
In 1784 Jacques-Louis David painted pendant portraits of his parents-in-law. By that time David-Pécoul's birth mother had died, and her father had married his second wife Geneviève Jacqueline, née Potain, who was the sister of the architect Nicolas Marie Potain. The portraits were possibly painted on the occasion of this second marriage:
David-Pécoul divorced her rebelling husband in 1793 for voting against the king during the Reign of Terror but after his imprisonment in 1794–1795 she remarried him in 1796. In 1795 he painted pendant portraits of her sister's family Pierre & Emilie Serizat with their son:
In 1812 David painted pendant portraits of his daughters Laure Émilie Félicité and Pauline Jeanne:
Daughter Laure was married to Baron Claude Marie Meunier:
Daughter Pauline Jeanne was married to Jean-Baptiste Jeanin:
When the painter was forced to leave Paris in 1815, David-Pécoul joined him in exile in Brussels where he enjoyed a career as painter and teacher before dying in 1825.
After her husband died she tried to have him buried in Paris, but even after death he was refused repatriation and he is buried in Brussels cemetery. She moved back to Paris, where she died the following year and is buried in Pere Lachaise cemetery along with her children. David's son had Jacques-Louis David's heart buried alongside the remains of his wife at Père Lachaise.