Jacques Guillaume Thouret

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jacques Guillaume Thouret (April 30, 1746 - April 22, 1794) was a French revolutionary, lawyer, president of the National Constituent Assembly and victim of the guillotine.

Contents

[edit] Life

Born at Pont-l'Évêque to a notary father, Thouret became an avocat at the parlement of Rouen in 1773, and in 1787 produced a much-approved report on the state of Normandy. In 1788 he participated in the agitation that contributed to the recall of the Estates-General. Thouret was elected deputy to the Estates-General by the third estate of Rouen, and in the Constituent Assembly his eloquence gained him great influence. Like so many lawyers of his time, he was violently opposed to the clergy, and strongly supported the secularization of church property. He also obtained the suppression of the religious orders and of all ecclesiastical privileges, and actively contributed to the change of the judiciary and administrative system; in particular, he demanded the writing of a uniform civil code. Thouret was also one of the promoters of the decree of 1790 by which France was divided into départements, and was four times president of the Constituent Assembly.

Article five of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen was adopted on his initiative. On 3 September 1791, a deputation of sixty members of the Constituent Assembly under the presidency of Thouret presented the 1791 Constitution to Louis XVI; on 13 September, the King addressed the Assembly, declaring that he accepted the Constitution.

After the Assembly's dissolution, Thouret became a member, and then in 1793 president, of the Court of Cassation. He was included in the proscription of the Girondists, whose political opinions he shared, and was guillotined in Paris during the Reign of Terror.

His brother, Michel Augustin Thouret (1748-1810), a physician, was a key opponent of the ideas of Franz Mesmer and a promoter of vaccination in France.

[edit] Trivia

A bust of Thouret created in 1879 by Jules-Constant Destreez can be seen in the gallery of the second floor of the Court of Cassation.

[edit] Works

Besides his speeches and reports he wrote:

  • Tableau chronologique de l'Histoire ancienne et moderne
  • Discours de M. Thouret devant l'Assemblée nationale fait au nom du comité de la Constitution : Sur l'obligation du roi de résider dans le royaume (1790)
  • Abrégé des révolutions de l'ancien gouvernement français

[edit] References

  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
  • Faruk Bilici,Thouret : sa vie, ses idée, son procès, contribution au livre « Hommage à Jacques-Guillaume Thouret, 1746-1794 », Rouen, 1990, p. 43-53.
  • A. Chauleur, Les deux dernières lettres de Jacques-Guillaume Thouret (1746-1794), Revue de l'Association Française pour l’Histoire de la Justice, N°4, 1991.

[edit] External links

In other languages