Jean Antoine Debry

See also: Debry

Jean Antoine Joseph Debry or De Bry , born with Vervins on November 25th 1760, died with Paris on January 6th 1834, was appointed Aisne with the national Convention.

He is lawyer at the time of the French revolution. He is successively elected member of the legislative Assemblée, of Convention and of the Conseil of the Five hundred, announces itself by a burning republicanism, and belonged to the committees of General security and public Hello. He votes in favor of the execution of Louis XVI, and makes decide the translation in the Pantheon of the remainders of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Named in 1797 plenipotentiary with the Congress of Rastadt with Bonnier and Roberjot, he escapes by miracle from the massacre whose his/her two colleagues are victims (1799) on the way of the return (he survives thirteen blows of saber), and comes to ask for revenge of this attack. He second Bonaparte at the time from the 18 brumaire and forms then part of the Court.

Under the Empire, it is named prefect of the Doubs, then the Low-Rhine, and is good administrator: it in reward is created baron. Debry is joined the Bourbons in 1814, and however finds the prefecture of the Low-Rhine during the Hundred Days. Exiled in 1816 like regicide, he lives with Mons, and returns in France only in 1830. There is of him a Essai on state education and a Éloge of Mirabeau , 1790.

His/her son, the baron Jean de Bry, a long time managed as prefect the department of the Coast-with Or.

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