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  1. François Hanriot (French pronunciation: [fʁɑ̃swa ɑ̃ʁjo]; 2 December 1759 – 28 July 1794) was a French Sans-culotte leader, street orator, and commander of the National Guard during the French Revolution.

  2. François Hanriot (born December 3, 1759, Nanterre, near Paris, France—died July 28, 1794, Paris) was the commander in chief of the Paris national guard during the supremacy of the Jacobin Club radicals, led by Maximilien Robespierre, in the French Revolution.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Francois Hanriot (1761-1794) was a Parisian sans-culotte who became an influential National Guard commander. Born in Paris to a family of servants, Hanriot’s early life was unremarkable and miserable: he attempted many jobs, failed at most of them and was usually penniless.

  4. Pour les articles homonymes, voir Hanriot . François Hanriot. Croquis par Georges-François-Marie Gabriel, Paris, musée Carnavalet. François Hanriot, né à Nanterre le 3 décembre 1759 1, guillotiné à Paris le 28 juillet 1794, est un général de division de la Révolution française .

  5. François Hanriot. French Revolutionary, sans-culotte; appointed at the head of the National Guard during the uprising against the Convention on 31 May 1793; guillotined with Robespierre, whom he supported, on 28 July 1794.

  6. The free speaking National Guard officer Francois Hanriot. Having picked a fight with Parisian radicals, the Girondins now faced even greater opposition. The Commune, the Paris sections, the Jacobin club and the sans-culottes all denounced the Girondins as Royalists and Federalists (by this stage, both were anti-revolutionary slurs).