In 1808, M. de Grandpree and M. le Pique quarreled over an actress who was supposed to be the former’s mistress but got caught in a compromising position with the latter. Because, they said, they had “elevated minds,” they agreed to fight an elevated duel. From a field next to the Tuileries, they rose up in a pair of hot-air balloons, each with a second and a supply of blunderbusses, since pistols wouldn’t have been up to the job. A great crowd gathered to watch what they thought was a balloon race.
The wind stood fair from the north-northwest. The balloonists managed to stay within roughly eighty yards of each other, and when they’d risen to about twenty-five hundred feet, M. le Pique fired and missed. M. de Grandpree fired back, apparently not at his opponent, but at the more obvious target, his balloon. It dropped like a stone and smashed the duelist and his second to pieces on the housetops.
Triumphant, the victor soared majestically off into the sky, descending unhurt some twenty miles away.
Source:
Holland, Barbara. “V. Blazing Away.” Gentlemen’s Blood: A History of Dueling From Swords at Dawn to Pistols at Dusk. Bloomsbury, 2004. 84-5. Print.
Bonus:
I found an article with more information on the event. Enjoy!
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The 19th century was far cooler than the 21st century is