Jacques de Flesselles

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Portrait of Jacques de Flesselles by Donat Nonnotte (Musée Carnavalet)

Jacques de Flesselles (1721, Paris – 14 July 1789) was a French public servant and one of the first victims of the French Revolution.

He served as Intendant of Lyon (17681784) and in 1784 he was sponsor of a Montgolfier balloon, named the Flesselles in his honour.[1]

Engraving, c.1789: French soldiers or militia hoisting the heads of Flesselles and the marquis de Launay on pikes

On 21 April 1789, he became the last provost of the merchants of Paris, a post roughly equivalent to mayor. Accused of royal sympathies by an infuriated throng surrounding the Paris City Hall in the afternoon after the storming of the Bastille, he was assassinated, shot by an unknown hand on the steps of the City Hall while trying to justify his actions, one of several representatives of the ancien régime killed that day.[2]

References

  1. Charles Coulston Gillispie - Science and Polity in France: The End of the Old Regime p23 2004 "To that end they persuaded Jacques de Flesselles to preside. Pr ́evˆot des Marchands since the previous April, ... of a manned Montgolfier balloon outside of Paris."
  2. Hibbert, Christopher (1980). The Days of the French Revolution. New York: William Morrow and Co. pp. 69–82. ISBN 0-688-03704-6. 

This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Wood, James, ed. (1907). "article name needed". The Nuttall Encyclopædia. London and New York: Frederick Warne. 

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