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See also: administrator, was See also: born at See also: Saumur
.
During the Seven Years' War he was intendant-general of the armies, and intendant of the army and See also: navy under Marshal de Belle-Isle
.
In 1771 he was appointedintendant of finances
.
In 1789, when See also: Necker was dismissed, See also: Foullon was appointed See also: minister of the See also: king's
See also: household, and was thought of by the reactionary party as a substitute
.
But he was unpopular on all sides
.
The farmers-general detested him on account of his severity, the Parisians on account of his See also: wealth accumulated in utter indifference to the sufferings of the poor; he was reported, probably quite without foundation, to have said, " If the See also: people cannot get See also: bread, let them eat See also: hay." After the taking of the Bastille on the 14th of See also: July, he withdrew to his estate at Vitry and attempted to spread the See also: news of his See also: death; but he was recognized, taken to See also: Paris, carried off with a bundle of hay tied to his back to the hotel de ville, and, in spite of the intervention of See also: Lafayette, was dragged out by the populace
and hanged to a lamp-See also: post on the 22nd of July 1789
.
See See also: Eugene Bonnemere, Histoire See also: des paysans (4th ed., 1887), tome iii
.
;,C
.
L
.
Chassin, See also: Les Elections et les cahiers de Paris en 1789
.
(Paris, 1889), tomes iii. and iv
.
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