 | Maximilien Robespierre: Encyclopedia II - Maximilien Robespierre - Early Politics
Maximilien Robespierre - Early Politics
He completed his law studies with distinction and was admitted as a lawyer in 1781. He returned to Arras to seek practice and to struggle against poverty. His reputation had preceded him. The Bishop of Arras, M. de Conzié, appointed him criminal judge in the diocese of Arras in March 1782. This appointment, which he soon resigned to avoid pronouncing a sentence of death, did not prevent his practicing at the bar. He quickly became a successful advocate. He then turned to literature and society and came to be regarded as one of the best writers - as well as one of the most popular dandies - of Arras.
In December 1783 he was elected a member of the academy of Arras, the meetings of which he attended regularly. In 1784 he obtained a medal from the academy of Metz for his essay on the question of whether the relatives of a condemned criminal should share his disgrace. He and Pierre Louis de Lacretelle, an advocate and journalist in Paris, divided the prize. Many of his subsequent essays were less successful, but Robespierre was compensated for these failures by his popularity in the literary and musical society at Arras, known as the "Rosati," of which Carnot was also a member.
In 1788 he took part in the discussion of the way that the Estates-General should be elected, showing clearly and forcibly in his Adresse à la nation artésienne that if the former mode of election by the members of the provincial estates were again adopted, the new States-General would not represent the people of France.
Although the leading members of the corporation were elected, Robespierre, their chief opponent, succeeded in getting elected with them. In the assembly of the bailliage rivalry ran still higher, but Robespierre had begun to make his mark in politics with the Avis aux habitants de la campagne (Arras, 1789). With this he secured the support of the country electors, and although only 30, comparatively poor and lacking patronage, he was elected fifth deputy of the tiers état of Artois to the States-General.
When the States-General met at Versailles on May 5, 1789, Robespierre's fanatical mindset was already apparent. As Honoré Mirabeau is reported to have said: "That young man believes what he says; he will go far". Robespierre, a fervent supporter of the doctrines of Rousseau, had begun already to shape them into a vision of his own.
While the Constituent Assembly occupied itself with drawing up a constitution, Robespierre turned from the assembly of provincial lawyers and wealthy bourgeois to the people of Paris. He was a frequent speaker in the Constituent Assembly; often with great success. He was eventually recognized as second only to Pétion de Villeneuve - if second he was - as a leader of the small body of the extreme left; "the thirty voices" as Mirabeau contemptuously called them.
When his instinct told him that his ideas would have no success in the Assembly, he turned to the Society of the Friends of the Constitution, known as the Jacobin Club. This had consisted originally of the Breton deputies only. After the Assembly moved to Paris the Club began to admit various leaders of the Parisian bourgeoisie to its membership. As time went on, many of the more intelligent artisans and small shopkeepers became members of the club. Among such men Robespierre found his audience. They did more than listen to him. They idolized him. The fanatical leader had found followers. As the wealthier bourgeois of Paris and deputies of a more moderate type seceded to the Club of '89, the influence of the old leaders of the Jacobins (Barnave, Duport, Alexandre de Lameth) diminished. When they, alarmed at the progress of the Revolution, founded the club of the Feuillants in 1791, the followers of Robespierre dominated the Jacobin Club.
The death of Mirabeau significantly strengthened Robespierre's hand in the Assembly. On May 15, 1791m (some accounts placing this on May 16) he proposed and carried the motion that no deputies who sat in the Constituent could sit in the succeeding Assembly. This has been construed by some as indicative of Robespierre's lack of political insight and his politically suspicious nature.
The flight of Louis XVI and his family on June 20 and his subsequent arrest at Varennes resulted in Robespierre declaring himself at the Jacobin Club to be ni monarchiste ni républicain ("neither monarchist nor republican").
After the massacre of the Champ de Mars (on July 17, 1791), in order to be nearer to the Assembly and the Jacobins, he moved to live in the house of Maurice Duplay, a cabinetmaker residing in the Rue Saint-Honoré and an ardent admirer of Robespierre's. Robespierre lived there (with two short intervals excepted) until his death. In fact, according to some sources, including his doctor, Souberbielle, Vilate, a juror on the Revolutionary Tribunal, and his host's youngest daughter (who would later marry Philippe Le Bas of the Committee of General Security), he became engaged to the eldest daughter of his host, Éléonore Duplay.
On September 30, on the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly, the people of Paris crowned Pétion and Robespierre as the two incorruptible patriots.
With the dissolution of the Assembly he returned for a short visit to Arras, where he met with a triumphant reception. In November he returned to Paris.
Other related archives10 June, 12 June, 1757, 1758, 1767, 1770, 1777, 1781, 1782, 1783, 1784, 1788, 1789, 1791, 1791m, 1792, 1793, 1794, 17th century, 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, 28 July, 6 May, 8 June, 9 Thermidor, Albert Soboul, Alexandre de Lameth, Arras, August 10, August 16, Augustin Robespierre, Austria, Babeuf, Barnave, Barras, Barère de Vieuzac, Billaud Varenne, Billaud-Varenne, Bourbons, Breton, Brissot de Warville, Buonarroti, Camille Desmoulins, Carnot, Carvin, Catherine Théot, Catholicism, Champ de Mars, Charlotte Corday, Collot d'Herbois, Committee of General Security, Committee of Public Safety, Commune of Paris, Constituent Assembly, Couthon, December 18, December 3, Duport, Estates-General, February 13, Feuillants, France, French Revolution, Georges Couthon, Georges Danton, Girondins, Girondist, Honoré Mirabeau, Hébert, Hébertists, Hérault de Séchelles, Hôtel de Ville, IPA, Irish, Jacobin Club, January 21, Jean Bon Saint-André, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Joseph Cambon, July 17, July 26, July 27, July 28, June 17, June 2, June 20, Law of 22 Prairial, Lazare Carnot, Legislative Assembly, Louis XVI, Louis XVI of France, Louvet de Couvrai, Lyon, Madame Roland, Marat, March 13, March 15, March 19, March 24, March 30, Marie Antoinette, Maximin Isnard, May 15, May 16, May 31, May 5, May 7, Metz, Mirabeau, Montagnards, Munich, National Convention, November 5, October 29, Paris, Pierre Louis de Lacretelle, Place de la Révolution, Prieur, Prieur Duvernois, Protestant Reformation, Provençal, Pétion, Pétion de Villeneuve, Reign of Terror, Revolutionary Tribunal, Robert Lindet, Rousseau, Saint-Just, September 13, September 26, September 30, Social Contract, Stanislas Fréron, Supreme Being, Tacitus, Tallien, Thermidor, Thomas Carlyle, Tuileries, Varennes, Versailles, absolutism, atheists, bailliage, bourgeois, condemned, constitution, coups d'état, dandy, deistic, dictatorial, dictatorship, dissolution, faith, falsehoods, fanaticism, fatal, federalist, flight, gendarme, guillotined, ideological, insurrection, left-wing, massacres of September, militarism, monarchist, national guards, panegyrics, philosophes, politics, poverty, reaction, rebutting, republican, revolt in the Vendée, revolutionary tribunal, royalist, sans-culottes, schismatic, the Mountain, theorist, tiers état, triumvirs, tyranny, virtue, Éléonore Duplay
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