![]() ![]() For the next year, he studied fencing with the best swordsman in town to get his revenge. In The Three Musketeers, it is revealed that he became a musketeer because of a woman and his arrogance as a young man in training for the priesthood, he had the misfortune to be caught (innocently or not) reading to a young married woman and thrown out of her house. He is portrayed as constantly ambitious and unsatisfied as a musketeer, he yearns to become an abbé but as an abbé, he wishes for the life of the soldier. The fictional Aramis is loosely based on the historical musketeer Henri d'Aramitz.Īramis loves and courts women, which fits well with the opinions of the time regarding Jesuits and abbots. He and the other two musketeers, Athos and Porthos, are friends of the novels' protagonist, d'Artagnan. René d'Herblay, alias Aramis, is a fictional character in the novels The Three Musketeers (1844), Twenty Years After (1845), and The Vicomte de Bragelonne (1847–1850) by Alexandre Dumas, père. The Vicomte of Bragelonne: Ten Years Later ![]()
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