The crowd surges into the Bastille's undefended…
July 1789 CE
A small party climbs onto the roof of a building next to the gate to the inner courtyard and breaks the chains on the drawbridge, crushing one vainqueur as it falls.
Soldiers of the garrison call to the people to withdraw but in the noise and confusion these shouts are misinterpreted as encouragement to enter.
Gunfire begins, apparently spontaneously, turning the crowd into a mob.
The crowd seems to have felt that they had been intentionally drawn into a trap and the fighting becomes more violent and intense, while attempts by deputies to organize a cease-fire are ignored by the attackers.
The firing continues, and after 3:00 pm, the attackers are reinforced by mutinous gardes françaises, along with two cannons.
A substantial force of Royal Army troops encamped on the Champ de Mars does not intervene.
With the possibility of mutual carnage suddenly apparent, Governor de Launay orders a cease-fire at 5:00 pm.
A letter offering his terms is handed out to the besiegers through a gap in the inner gate.
His demands are refused, but de Launay nonetheless capitulates, as he realizes that with limited food stocks and no water supply his troops cannot hold out much longer.
He accordingly opens the gates to the inner courtyard, and the vainqueurs sweep in to liberate the fortress at 5:30.
Ninety-eight attackers and one defender have died in the actual fighting, a disparity accounted for by the protection provided to the garrison by the fortress walls.
De Launay is seized and dragged towards the Hôtel de Ville in a storm of abuse.
Outside the Hôtel, a discussion as to his fate begins.
The badly beaten de Launay shouts "Enough! Let me die!" and kicks a pastry cook named Dulait in the groin.
De Launay is then stabbed repeatedly and dies.
An English traveller, Doctor Edward Rigby, reports what he saw, " [We] perceived two bloody heads raised on pikes, which were said to be the heads of the Marquis de Launay, Governor of the Bastille, and of Monsieur Flesselles, Prévôt des Marchands. It was a chilling and a horrid sight! … Shocked and disgusted at this scene, [we] retired immediately from the streets.
The three officers of the permanent Bastille garrison are also killed by the crowd; surviving police reports detail their wounds and clothing.
Two of the invalides of the garrison are lynched, but all save two of the Swiss regulars of the Salis-Samade Regiment are protected by the French Guards and eventually released to return to their regiment.
Their officer, Lieutenant Louis de Flue, will write a detailed report on the defense of the Bastille, which will be incorporated in the logbook of the Salis-Samade and has survived.
It is (perhaps unfairly) critical of the dead Marquis de Launay, whom de Flue accuses of weak and indecisive leadership.
The blame for the fall of the Bastille rather appears to lie with the inertia of the commanders of the five thousand Royal Army troops encamped on the Champ de Mars, who had not acted when either the nearby Hôtel des Invalides or the Bastille were attacked.
Returning to the Hôtel de Ville, the mob accuses the prévôt dès marchands (roughly, mayor) Jacques de Flesselles of treachery, and he is assassinated en route to an ostensible trial at the Palais-Royal.