- François Buzot
François Nicolas Léonard Buzot (
March 1 ,1760 –June 18 ,1794 ) was a French politician and leader of theFrench Revolution .Biography
Early life
Born at
Évreux , he studiedLaw , and, at the outbreak of the Revolution was alawyer in his home town. In 1789 he was elected deputy to the Estates-General and there became known for his radical opinions. He demanded thenationalization of the possessions of theRoman Catholic Church , and the right of all citizens to bear arms.After the dissolution of the
National Constituent Assembly , Buzot returned to Évreux, where he was named president of the criminal tribunal.Convention
In 1792 he was elected deputy to the
National Convention , and joined theGirondist s under the influence of his friendMadame Roland . Buzot entered a polemic with the main rival of the Girondists,Jean-Paul Marat , and demanded the formation of a National Guard from the "départements" to defend the Convention against the Paris crowds of "sans-culotte s". His proposal was carried, but never put into force - the Parisians subsequently singled him out as a target of their hatred.In the trial of King Louis XVI, Buzot voted in favour of the
capital punishment death, but with appeal to the people and postponement of sentence ("sursis"). He had a sentence of death passed against the Royalist "émigré s" who did not return to France, and against anyone who should demand the re-establishment of the monarchy. At the same time, he opposedGeorges Danton andThe Mountain , and rejected the creation of aCommittee of Public Safety andRevolutionary Tribunal (but abstained when the question of Marat's trial before the Tribunal was brought up by the Girondists).Flight and resistance
Proscribed with the Girondists on
June 2 1793 , he escaped, and took refuge toCalvados inNormandy , where he contributed to organize a Girondistinsurrection against the Convention, which was suppressed soon after.The Convention prosecuted him, and decreed "that the house occupied by Buzot be demolished, and never to be rebuilt on this plot. [Instead,] a
column shall be raised, on which there shall be written: «Here was the sanctuary of the villain Buzot who, while a representative of the people, conspired for the overthrow of the French Republic»". He fled together withJérôme Pétion de Villeneuve toSaint-Émilion , nearBordeaux , and remained in hiding. Both of them committedsuicide in the forest surrounding the area; their bodies were recovered a month later, half-eaten by wolves.He left behind his "Memoirs", first published in 1823.
References
*1911 "In turn, it cites as reference:"
** "Mémoires de Pétion, Barbaroux, Buzot", published by C. A. Daubon (Paris, 1866).
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