Jean-Baptiste Charles Matthieu
Jean-Baptiste Charles Matthieu | |
|---|---|
| 67th President of the National Convention | |
| In office 26 May – 4 June 1795 | |
| Preceded by | Théodore Vernier |
| Succeeded by | Jean-Denis Lanjuinais |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 3 October 1763 |
| Died | 31 October 1833 (aged 70) |
| Party | The Plain |
Jean-Baptiste-Charles-Mirampal Matthieu (3 October 1763, Compiègne – 31 October 1833, Condat,[1] Gironde) was a French politician and Deputy to the National Convention.
He voted for the execution of Louis XVI. On 4 September 1792, he was elected member of the convention by the department of Oise. Initially he was a moderate, despising the excesses of the Jacobins and directing his hostility toward Robespierre. On 26 May 1795, he was elected president of the Convention in a difficult position, just after the Uprising of 1 Prairial.
Bibliography
- Gainot, Bernard (1990). Dictionnaire des membres du comité de Salut Public (in French). Paris: Tallandier.
- "Jean-Baptiste, Charles Mathieu-Mirampal". National Assembly (in French).