- Jacques Roux
Jacques Roux (
21 August 1752 –10 February 1794 ) was the radical leader of theEnragés faction during theFrench Revolution . He was one of the first priests to accept theCivil Constitution of the Clergy . His radicalism and his surname caused him to be called "the Red Priest". His demands on price and tax reglementation increased his popular support and political influence. He became a member of the 1792Paris Commune and took a major role in the 1793 Paris uprising which removed theGirondist government. BeforeLouis XVI was sent to be guillotined, he asked Roux to pass a parcel with some personal belongings to his wife, to which Roux replied 'I am not here to run errands, I am here to send you to the scaffold.'He spoke out in the
National Convention against "commercial aristocracy", considering it to be worse than the nobility or clergy. Deserted by former associates during theReign of Terror , he was arrested under theLaw of Suspects in September 1793. Roux was condemned to death at theRevolutionary Tribunal but before his execution stabbed himself and was carried away toBicêtre Hospital where he died. Many believe Roux'ssuicide to be an odd decision on his part. His death came at the height of the terror so he would have most probably been considered amartyr of the revolution had he died defiant in his ideology but instead has largely been forgotten.External links
* [http://www.marxists.org/history/france/revolution/roux/index.htm Jacques Roux Archive at Marxists.org]
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