Charles-Louis Antiboul
Charles Louis Antiboul , born with Saint-Tropez (VAr), on May 20th 1752, dead guillotine in Paris, on October 31st 1793, appointed VAr with the national Convention.
Lawyer with Saint-Tropez, it became after 1789, administrator of the VAr, and on September 6th 1792, it was elected by this department, the seventh on eight, with national Convention, where it sat on the benches Girondins.
At the time of the Lawsuit of Louis XVI, it voted for the culpability of the king, against the ratification of the judgment of the people, for detention, like general security measures, and it abstained from at the time of the vote on the possibility of a deferment.
February 21st, 1793, during a long discussion, it had to defend its marked department of federalism, in particular by Jean Bon Saint-Andrew
Member of the Committee of navy, it was at the origin of a decree which made it possible the French marine to bring in her ports the neutral ships charged with goods intended for the enemy powers.
April 13rd, 1793, he voted against the committal for trial of Marat, and on May 28th, he abstained from at the time of the poll on the report/ratio of the decree, which takes care it, had broken the Commission of the Twelve.
Sent on mission Corsica in in June 1793, it was captured with Marseilles by the insurrectionists. Shown to have compromised the dignity of representative of the people, it was, on the motion of Jean Bon Saint-Andrew, issued arrest on September 7th, 1793. It appeared before the revolutionary Tribunal at the same time as the Of Gironde ones, and under the same inculpation, of the 3 to the 9 brumaire year II (24 October 30th, 1793). It practically did not have the word, if is not to answer in the way in which it had voted at the time of the lawsuit of the king and of the decree of charge of Marat. He also declared with a third question of the president Hermann: While arriving at Convention, I placed myself at the Mountain; but not hearing rather distinctly the speaker, I approached the platform. Condemned to death, the 9 brumaire year II, with its twenties Co-condemned, it was guillotine the following day with them.
Sources
- Parliamentary records of 1787 to 1860: complete collection of the legislative and political debates of the French Rooms. First series, 1787 to 1799. Volumes LIII, LVII, LXII, LXV and LXXI
- Gerard Walter, Acts of the revolutionary Tribunal .
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