- Jean Denis, comte Lanjuinais
Jean Denis, comte Lanjuinais (
12 March 1753 -13 January 1827 ) was a French politician, lawyer, jurist, journalist, and historian.Biography
Early career
Born in
Rennes (Ille-et-Vilaine ), Lanjuinais, after a brilliant college career, which made him doctor of laws and a qualified barrister at nineteen, was appointed counsel to the Breton Estates and, in 1775, professor of ecclesiastical law in Rennes. At this period he wrote two important works which, owing to the distracted state of public affairs, remained unpublished, "Institutiones juris ecciesiastici" and "Praelectiones juris ecclesiastici".He had begun his career at the bar by pleading against the "droit du colombier" (feudal monopoly on
dovecote s), and when he was sent by his fellow-citizens to the Estates-General of 1789 he demanded the abolition of nobility and the substitution of the Royal title "king of the French and the Navarrese" for "king of France and Navarre", and helped to establish the "Civil Constitution of the Clergy ".Convention and clandestinity
Elected to the
National Convention in September 1792, he developed moderate, evenreactionary views, becoming one of the fiercest opponents ofThe Mountain - although he never wavered in his support for the French Republic. He refused to vote for the death of Louis XVI, alleging that the nation had no right to despatch a vanquished prisoner.His daily attacks on The Mountain resulted, on the
April 15 ,1793 , in a demand by the Paris Commune for his exclusion from the assembly, but Lanjuinais remained implacable - when theParis ian populace underFrançois Hanriot invaded the Convention onJune 2 , he renewed his defiance of the victorious party. Placed under arrest with theGirondist s, he escaped to Rennes where he drew up apamphlet denouncing the Montagnard Constitution under the curious title "Le Dernier Crime de Lanjuinais" ("The Latest Crime of Lanjuinais", Rennes, 1793). Pursued byJean-Baptiste Carrier , who was sent to stamp out resistance in the west, he lay hidden until some time after the outbreak of theThermidorian Reaction (July 1794), but he was readmitted to the Convention on theMarch 8 ,1795 .Later career
He maintained his liberal and independent attitude in the
Council of Ancients of theFrench Directory , the Senate of the Consulate and First Empire, and the Chamber of Peers, being president of the upper house during theHundred Days . Together withGui-Jean-Baptiste Target , Joseph-Marie Portalis and others he founded under the Empire an academy of legislation in Paris, and lectured onRoman law .Closely associated with oriental scholars, and a keen student of oriental religions, he entered the Académie des Inscriptions in 1808. After the
Bourbon Restoration , Lanjuinais consistently defended the principles ofconstitutional monarchy , but most of his time was given to religious and political subjects. He was President of the Chamber of Representatives fromJune 4 , toJuly 13 ,1815 . Comte Lanjuinans died in Paris.Works
Besides many contributions to periodical literature he wrote, among other works:
*"Constitutions de la Nation française" (1819)
*"Appréciation du projet de loi relatif aux trois concordats" (1806, 6th ed. 1827) - a defence ofGallicanism
*"Études biographiques et littéraires surAntoine Arnauld , P. Nicole etJacques Necker " (1823).Family
His son, Victor Ambroise, vicomte de Lanjuinais (1802-1869), was also a politician, becoming a deputy in 1838. His interests lay chiefly in financial questions and in 1849 he became minister of commerce and agriculture in the cabinet of
Odilon Barrot . He wrote a "Notice historique sur la vie et les ouvrages du comte de Lanjuinais", which was prefixed to an edition of his fathers "Œuvres" (4 vols., 1832).References
*1911 "In turn, it cites as references:"
**François Victor Alphonse Aulard , "Les Orateurs de la Législative et de la Convention" (Paris, 1885-1886)
**J. M. Quérard, "La France littéraire", vol. iii. (1829).
**A. Robert and G. Cougny, "Dictionnaire des parlementaires", vol. ii. (1890)
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