Jean François Ricord

Jean François Ricord , born in 1760 and deceased in 1818, was a lawyer and mayor of Grasse. In 1792, it is elected appointed Convention by the department of the Var. It sits at the sides of the Montagnards. He votes the death of the king at the time of the Procès of Louis XVI the January 20th 1793. He is sent for several missions in the Midi, in particular with Toulon. Too much related to terrorists, it was stopped under the Convention thermidorienne. It was released thanks to the amnesty voted during the separation of Convention thermidorienne the October 26th 1795.

Under the Directory

He was accused of complicity with Gracchus Babeuf, but was discharged by the High-Court of Vendôme.

Under the Consulate and the First Empire

He was stopped in 1801 and 1806.

Under the Restoration

According to the law of 1816 which punished exile the regicides, Jean-François Ricord was banished in 1816. He died in Paris the February 21st 1818.

Sources

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