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For an English translation, see [[http://blackcoatpress.com/johndevil.htm here]] (by Brian Stableford).

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For Brian Stableford made an English translation, see [[http://blackcoatpress.com/johndevil.htm here]] (by Brian Stableford).language translation.

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[[http://blackcoatpress.com/johndevil.htm Official page for the English translation by Brian Stableford]].

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For an English translation, see
[[http://blackcoatpress.com/johndevil.htm Official page for the English translation by here]] (by Brian Stableford]].Stableford).
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typo correction


* InspectorLestrade: the entirety of UsefulNotes/ScotlandYard when Temple is trying to prove Thompson's innocence. They think he's going mad, [[GoMadFromTheRevelation their not entirely wrong]].

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* InspectorLestrade: the entirety of UsefulNotes/ScotlandYard when Temple is trying to prove Thompson's innocence. They think he's going mad, [[GoMadFromTheRevelation their they're not entirely wrong]].
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/john_devil.jpg]]
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* CoDragons: We have arguably three. Officially, Henri Belcamp makes Robert Surisy the lieutenant of his private SteamPunk navy formed to free Napoleon and destroy England. And Ned Knob manages to become Tom Brown's eyes and ears in London's criminal underworld. But his true [StandardEvilEmpireHierarchy Right Hand]] is Sarah O'Neil, who is the only person from the start in on all the various layers of his compartmentalized Evil Plan.

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* CoDragons: We have arguably three. Officially, Henri Belcamp makes Robert Surisy the lieutenant of his private SteamPunk navy formed to free Napoleon and destroy England. And Ned Knob manages to become Tom Brown's eyes and ears in London's criminal underworld. But his true [StandardEvilEmpireHierarchy [[StandardEvilEmpireHierarchy Right Hand]] is Sarah O'Neil, who is the only person from the start in on all the various layers of his compartmentalized Evil Plan.
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Removed a pothole that gave no indication that the trope was being followed for the redefinition and renaming of the trope.


* GreatDetective: [[TheInspector Gregory Temple]]

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* GreatDetective: [[TheInspector Gregory Temple]]Temple
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* GreaterScopeVillain: NapoleonBonaparte as well as in another Féval story [[Literature/GentlemenOfTheNight ''Mysteries of London'']] adapted for the stage as ''Gentlemen of The Night''. The BigBad of each claims to have met Napoleon on St.Helena in about 1815-1816. Both have their own reasons for the wars against England, however, and only Henri Belcamp in ''John Devil'' could have actually benefited Napoleon (Since the other's main narrative is set after Napoleon died), and Henri even more so is really about his own ambition, he really wants to be the next Napoleon, freeing the first is merely for a PassingTheTorch moment. O'Breane in ''Gentlemen of the Night'' is motivated by liberating and avenging Ireland. Both are made in continuity with each other via ''Literature/TheBlackCoats''.

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* GreaterScopeVillain: NapoleonBonaparte UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte as well as in another Féval story [[Literature/GentlemenOfTheNight ''Mysteries of London'']] adapted for the stage as ''Gentlemen of The Night''. The BigBad of each claims to have met Napoleon on St.Helena in about 1815-1816. Both have their own reasons for the wars against England, however, and only Henri Belcamp in ''John Devil'' could have actually benefited Napoleon (Since the other's main narrative is set after Napoleon died), and Henri even more so is really about his own ambition, he really wants to be the next Napoleon, freeing the first is merely for a PassingTheTorch moment. O'Breane in ''Gentlemen of the Night'' is motivated by liberating and avenging Ireland. Both are made in continuity with each other via ''Literature/TheBlackCoats''.

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* BiggerBad: NapoleonBonaparte as well as in another Féval story [[Literature/GentlemenOfTheNight ''Mysteries of London'']] adapted for the stage as ''Gentlemen of The Night''. The BigBad of each claims to have met Napoleon on St.Helena in about 1815-1816. Both have their own reasons for the wars against England, however, and only Henri Belcamp in ''John Devil'' could have actually benefited Napoleon (Since the other's main narrative is set after Napoleon died), and Henri even more so is really about his own ambition, he really wants to be the next Napoleon, freeing the first is merely for a PassingTheTorch moment. O'Breane in ''Gentlemen of the Night'' is motivated by liberating and avenging Ireland. Both are made in continuity with each other via ''Literature/TheBlackCoats''.


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* GreaterScopeVillain: NapoleonBonaparte as well as in another Féval story [[Literature/GentlemenOfTheNight ''Mysteries of London'']] adapted for the stage as ''Gentlemen of The Night''. The BigBad of each claims to have met Napoleon on St.Helena in about 1815-1816. Both have their own reasons for the wars against England, however, and only Henri Belcamp in ''John Devil'' could have actually benefited Napoleon (Since the other's main narrative is set after Napoleon died), and Henri even more so is really about his own ambition, he really wants to be the next Napoleon, freeing the first is merely for a PassingTheTorch moment. O'Breane in ''Gentlemen of the Night'' is motivated by liberating and avenging Ireland. Both are made in continuity with each other via ''Literature/TheBlackCoats''.
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In 1862, Creator/PaulFeval founded the magazine ''Jean Diable''. EmileGaboriau, creator of MonsieurLecoq, was one of its editors. Lecoq later influenced the creation of SherlockHolmes.

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In 1862, Creator/PaulFeval founded the magazine ''Jean Diable''. EmileGaboriau, Creator/EmileGaboriau, creator of MonsieurLecoq, Literature/MonsieurLecoq, was one of its editors. Lecoq later influenced the creation of SherlockHolmes.
Literature/SherlockHolmes.



Paul Feval pioneered the modern crime thriller, creating here both the first police detective (Gregory Temple is the first Scotland Yard Detective in fiction) and the first [[SuperVillain arch-criminal]] (''John Devil'' is a proto-''Literature/{{Fantomas}}'') in popular fiction.

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Paul Feval Féval pioneered the modern crime thriller, creating here both the first police detective (Gregory Temple is the first Scotland Yard Detective in fiction) and the first [[SuperVillain arch-criminal]] (''John Devil'' is a proto-''Literature/{{Fantomas}}'') in popular fiction.



* AncientConspiracy: The Rosicrucians and other Secret Societies are all tools of Henri, but his ambition is his own. Latter connected to the history of Literature/TheBlackCoats.

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* AncientConspiracy: The Rosicrucians and other Secret Societies are all tools of Henri, but his ambition is his own. Latter connected to the history of Literature/TheBlackCoats.''Literature/TheBlackCoats''.



* BiggerBad: NapoleonBonaparte as well as in another Feval story [[Literature/GentlemenOfTheNight ''Mysteries of London'']] adapted for the stage as ''Gentlemen of The Night''. The BigBad of each claims to have met Napoleon on St.Helena in about 1815-1816. Both have their own reasons for the wars against England, however, and only Henri Belcamp in ''John Devil'' could have actually benefited Napoleon (Since the other's main narrative is set after Napoleon died), and Henri even more so is really about his own ambition, he really wants to be the next Napoleon, freeing the first is merely for a PassingTheTorch moment. O'Breane in ''Gentlemen of the Night'' is motivated by liberating and avenging Ireland. Both are made in continuity with each other via TheBlackCoats.

to:

* BiggerBad: NapoleonBonaparte as well as in another Feval Féval story [[Literature/GentlemenOfTheNight ''Mysteries of London'']] adapted for the stage as ''Gentlemen of The Night''. The BigBad of each claims to have met Napoleon on St.Helena in about 1815-1816. Both have their own reasons for the wars against England, however, and only Henri Belcamp in ''John Devil'' could have actually benefited Napoleon (Since the other's main narrative is set after Napoleon died), and Henri even more so is really about his own ambition, he really wants to be the next Napoleon, freeing the first is merely for a PassingTheTorch moment. O'Breane in ''Gentlemen of the Night'' is motivated by liberating and avenging Ireland. Both are made in continuity with each other via TheBlackCoats.''Literature/TheBlackCoats''.



* UnreliableNarrator: Feval loved experimenting with this (Though typically more then half truths and misleads then outright lies), and in this story he is at his trickiest, when it comes to certain details. [[spoiler: If you think Tom Brown is truly a different person, you've been suckered]]

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* UnreliableNarrator: Feval Féval loved experimenting with this (Though typically more then half truths and misleads then outright lies), and in this story he is at his trickiest, when it comes to certain details. [[spoiler: If you think Tom Brown is truly a different person, you've been suckered]]
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* CoDragons: We have arguably three. Officially, Henri Belcamp makes Robert Surisy the lieutenant of his private SteamPunk navy formed to free Napoleon and destroy England. And Ned Knob manages to become Tom Brown's eyes and ears in London's criminal underworld. But his true [[TheDragon Dragon]] is Sarah O'Neil, who is the only person from the start in on all the various layers of his compartmentalized Evil Plan.

to:

* CoDragons: We have arguably three. Officially, Henri Belcamp makes Robert Surisy the lieutenant of his private SteamPunk navy formed to free Napoleon and destroy England. And Ned Knob manages to become Tom Brown's eyes and ears in London's criminal underworld. But his true [[TheDragon Dragon]] [StandardEvilEmpireHierarchy Right Hand]] is Sarah O'Neil, who is the only person from the start in on all the various layers of his compartmentalized Evil Plan.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* BiggerBad: NapoleonBonaparte as well as in another Feval story ''Mysteries of London'' adapted for the stage as ''Gentlemen of The Night''. The BigBad of each claims to have met Napoleon on St.Helena in about 1815-1816. Both have their own reasons for the wars against England, however, and only Henri Belcamp in ''John Devil'' could have actually benefited Napoleon (Since the other's main narrative is set after Napoleon died), and Henri even more so is really about his own ambition, he really wants to be the next Napoleon, freeing the first is merely for a PassingTheTorch moment. O'Breane in ''Gentlemen of the Night'' is motivated by liberating and avenging Ireland. Both are made in continuity with each other via TheBlackCoats.

to:

* BiggerBad: NapoleonBonaparte as well as in another Feval story [[Literature/GentlemenOfTheNight ''Mysteries of London'' London'']] adapted for the stage as ''Gentlemen of The Night''. The BigBad of each claims to have met Napoleon on St.Helena in about 1815-1816. Both have their own reasons for the wars against England, however, and only Henri Belcamp in ''John Devil'' could have actually benefited Napoleon (Since the other's main narrative is set after Napoleon died), and Henri even more so is really about his own ambition, he really wants to be the next Napoleon, freeing the first is merely for a PassingTheTorch moment. O'Breane in ''Gentlemen of the Night'' is motivated by liberating and avenging Ireland. Both are made in continuity with each other via TheBlackCoats.
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'''JohnDevil provides examples of the following tropes:'''

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'''JohnDevil provides !!Provides examples of the following tropes:'''tropes:
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-> ''"JOHN DEVIL! That name pursues me. Someone is beneath that mask and behind that lie! Will I die mad before strangling my executioner?"''

In 1862, Creator/PaulFeval founded the magazine ''Jean Diable''. EmileGaboriau, creator of MonsieurLecoq, was one of its editors. Lecoq later influenced the creation of SherlockHolmes.

1817, England. Chief Superintendent Gregory Temple of Scotland Yard is mystified by the actions of a faceless crime leader who calls himself "John Devil" and is also known on the continent as Jean Diable and Hans Teufel...

Can the world's first scientific detective use his prodigious abilities to discover the secret identity of the elusive John Devil and capture him before the madman rescues Napoleon from Saint-Helens?

Written in 1861, ''John Devil'' will be of special interest to fans of detective stories, crime thrillers, classic mysteries, pulp literature and proto science-fiction.

Paul Feval pioneered the modern crime thriller, creating here both the first police detective (Gregory Temple is the first Scotland Yard Detective in fiction) and the first [[SuperVillain arch-criminal]] (''John Devil'' is a proto-''Literature/{{Fantomas}}'') in popular fiction.

The villain's plot to use [[SteamPunk steam-powered]] armored warships to free Napoleon and conquer India also makes it the first techno-thriller in popular literature.
[[http://blackcoatpress.com/johndevil.htm Official page for the English translation by Brian Stableford]].
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'''JohnDevil provides examples of the following tropes:'''
* AncientConspiracy: The Rosicrucians and other Secret Societies are all tools of Henri, but his ambition is his own. Latter connected to the history of Literature/TheBlackCoats.
* AntiVillain: Henri Belcamp, but [[SlidingScaleOfAntiVillains what type is debatable]]. You could interpret him as an AntiHero [[spoiler:If you believe the claim Tom Brown is a different person]].
* BatmanGambit: How Henri Belcamp gets his final upper hand on Gregory Temple at Newgate. [[spoiler:Both of them come up with the same plan to free Richard Thompson (Disguise him and switch places), but Henri knows Temple will use the same plan, so he makes sure he get there first and then trick Temple into tell him what he needs to know from him before using Temple's escape plan for himself]].
* BigBad: Henri Belcamp
* BiggerBad: NapoleonBonaparte as well as in another Feval story ''Mysteries of London'' adapted for the stage as ''Gentlemen of The Night''. The BigBad of each claims to have met Napoleon on St.Helena in about 1815-1816. Both have their own reasons for the wars against England, however, and only Henri Belcamp in ''John Devil'' could have actually benefited Napoleon (Since the other's main narrative is set after Napoleon died), and Henri even more so is really about his own ambition, he really wants to be the next Napoleon, freeing the first is merely for a PassingTheTorch moment. O'Breane in ''Gentlemen of the Night'' is motivated by liberating and avenging Ireland. Both are made in continuity with each other via TheBlackCoats.
* CoDragons: We have arguably three. Officially, Henri Belcamp makes Robert Surisy the lieutenant of his private SteamPunk navy formed to free Napoleon and destroy England. And Ned Knob manages to become Tom Brown's eyes and ears in London's criminal underworld. But his true [[TheDragon Dragon]] is Sarah O'Neil, who is the only person from the start in on all the various layers of his compartmentalized Evil Plan.
* DiabolicalMasterMind: Henri Belcamp of course
* EtTuBrute: [[spoiler: Helen's betrayal of Henri at the end.]] And to a lesser extent Temple's attitude when he thought Thompson was the killer.
* FemmeFatale: Sarah O'Neil. Not a very extreme example, she doesn't kill or explicitly have sex with anyone, but she flirts brilliantly. And her introduction in the first Chapter is arguably the first example of the FilmNoir style FemmeFatale entering the Detective's office and him clearly being suspicious. In which case it's clearly the UnbuiltTrope.
** Helen Brown, presumably when she was younger and in her prime, though we never see her in action. Perhaps closer to TheVamp; whether or not the claim she repented should be believed is unclear.
* GreatDetective: [[TheInspector Gregory Temple]]
* InspectorLestrade: the entirety of UsefulNotes/ScotlandYard when Temple is trying to prove Thompson's innocence. They think he's going mad, [[GoMadFromTheRevelation their not entirely wrong]].
* LukeYouAreMyFather: Henri tells Temple at one point that [[spoiler: The Killer, John Devil, is actually his half brother, Tom Brown, who he claims is Temple's son by an adulterous affair with Helen Brown. This is most likely all a complete lie however, it doesn't fit the total fact.]]
* SecretIdentity: Henri Belcamp has countless of these, and other characters like Sarah have a few, too.
* SuperVillain: Some would claim the title character the TropeMaker.
* UnreliableNarrator: Feval loved experimenting with this (Though typically more then half truths and misleads then outright lies), and in this story he is at his trickiest, when it comes to certain details. [[spoiler: If you think Tom Brown is truly a different person, you've been suckered]]
* VillainProtagonist: Henri Belcamp
* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Henri's couldn't have better.
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