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{{Era|ACI|Assassins}}
{{Era|ACI|Assassins}}
{{WP-REAL|Jeannot}}
{{WP-REAL|Jeannot}}
'''Jeannot Bullet''' (unknown – 1791) was a leader of slave rebellion of [[Haitian Revolution]], and a member of the [[Assassins|Assassin Brotherhood]].
'''Jeannot Bullet''' (unknown – 1791) was a leader of the slave rebellion of [[Haitian Revolution]], and a member of the [[Assassins|Assassin Brotherhood]].


Alongside his Brothers, Bullet planned an uprising against the white colonists of [[Haiti|Saint-Domingue]], hoping to ensure freedom for the colony's [[Slavery|slaves]]. During a vodou ceremony at Bois Caïman in 1791, Bullet, [[Jean-François Papillon]] and [[Georges Biassou]] were prophesized to become leaders of the rebellion by [[Dutty Boukman]].
Alongside his Brothers, Bullet planned an uprising against the white colonists of [[Haiti|Saint-Domingue]], hoping to ensure freedom for the colony's [[Slavery|slaves]]. During a vodou ceremony at Bois Caïman in 1791, Bullet, [[Jean-François Papillon]] and [[Georges Biassou]] were prophesized to become leaders of the rebellion by [[Dutty Boukman]].

Revision as of 17:59, 2 March 2014


Jeannot Bullet (unknown – 1791) was a leader of the slave rebellion of Haitian Revolution, and a member of the Assassin Brotherhood.

Alongside his Brothers, Bullet planned an uprising against the white colonists of Saint-Domingue, hoping to ensure freedom for the colony's slaves. During a vodou ceremony at Bois Caïman in 1791, Bullet, Jean-François Papillon and Georges Biassou were prophesized to become leaders of the rebellion by Dutty Boukman.

However, by August 1791, Bullet had begun to brutally slaughter the whites and mulattoes living in the colony, making his Brothers Eseosa and Toussaint Bréda to be sickened by his actions. Eseosa, wanting to not make the same mistakes as François Mackandal did decades earlier, had Biassou and Papillon capture Bullet. Eseosa sentenced Bullet to die for breaking the first tenet of their Creed, to which Bullet only responded with laughter, saying they would never succeed in their rebellion.

Reference