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Jean Joseph Mounier (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ ʒozɛf munje]; 12 November 1758 – 28 January 1806) was a French politician and judge. Biography [ edit ] Mounier was born the son of a cloth merchant in Grenoble in Southeastern France.
Jean-Joseph Mounier, né le 12 novembre 1758 à Grenoble et mort le 27 janvier 1806 à Paris, est un avocat et un homme politique français, qui joue un rôle important dans les premiers temps de la Révolution française (1788-1789), mais qui se retire de la vie politique dès 1790, puis part dans l'émigration.
Juge royal à Grenoble en 1783, Jean-Joseph Mounier est élu à l’unanimité député du Tiers-État de la province du Dauphiné aux États généraux de 1789. Il y est un des partisans les plus ardents de la réunion des trois ordres.
In France: Restructuring France. …ill-considered radicalism of such decisions, Jean-Joseph Mounier, a leading patriot deputy in the summer of 1789 and author of the Tennis Court Oath, resigned from the Assembly in October.
miniadurenn gant Jean-François Favre, 1789, Londrez, Victoria and Albert Museum. Jean-Joseph Mounier, ganet e Grenoble d'an 12 a viz Du 1758 hag aet da Anaon e Pariz d'ar 27 a viz Genver 1806, a oa un alvokad ha politikour gall.
Jean-Joseph Mounier (1758-1806) was a French politician and jurist who had a significant role in the first months of the revolution. Mounier was born in Grenoble, the son of a cloth manufacturer.
This chapter examines the meanings of moderation during the initial phase of the French Revolution by focusing on the ideas of Jean-Joseph Mounier, Stanislas de Clermont-Tonnerre, Trophimé-Gérard Lally-Tollendal, and Pierre Victor Malouet—the French monarchiens, also known as the “radical moderates” of 1789.