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See also: born at La Rochefoucauld
.
At the age of eighteen he entered the See also: house of La Rochefoucauld as a servant, and in 1646 became secretary to See also: Francois de la Rochefoucauld, author of the See also: Maxima
.
Resourceful and See also: quick-witted, he rendered services to his master during the See also: Fronde, in his intrigues with the parliament, the See also: court or the princes
.
In these negotiations he made the acquaintance of Conde, whom he wished to help to escape from the chateau of See also: Vincennes; of See also: Mazarin, for whom he negotiated the reconciliation with the princes; and of Nicolas Fouquet
.
After the Fronde he engaged in See also: financial affairs, thanks to Fouquet
.
In 1658 he farmed the See also: taille in See also: Guienne
.
He bought depreciated rentes and had them raised to their nominal value by the See also: treasury; he extorted gifts from the financiers for his See also: protection, being Fouquet's confidant in many operations of which he shared the profits
.
In three years he accumulated an enormous See also: fortune, still further increased by his unfailing See also: good fortune at See also: cards, playing even with the See also: king
.
He was involved in the trial of Fouquet, and in
See also: April 1663 was condemned to See also: death for peculation and embezzlement of public funds; but escaping, was executed in effigy
.
He sent a See also: valet one See also: night to take the effigy down from the gallows in the court of the Palais de See also: Justice, and then fled the country
.
He remained five years abroad, being excepted in 1665 from the amnesty accorded by See also: Louis XIV. to the condemned financiers
.
Having returned secretly to
See also: France, he entered the service of Conde, who, unable to meet his creditors, had need of a See also: clever manager to put his affairs in See also: order
.
In this way he was able to reappear at court, to assist at the See also: campaigns of the war with See also: Holland, and to offer himself for all the delicate negotiations
for his master or the king
.
He received
See also: diplomatic See also: missions in See also: Germany, in Holland, and especially in See also: Spain, though it was only in 1694, that he was freed from the condemnation pronounced against him by the chamber of justice
.
From 1696 he See also: fell See also: ill and withdrew to his estate, where he dictated to his secretary, in four months and a See also: half, his Memoires, an important source for the See also: history of his See also: time
.
In spite of several errors, introduced purposely, they give a clear idea of the See also: life and morals of a financier of the age of Fouquet, and throw See also: light on certain points of the diplomatic history
.
They were first published in 1724
.
There is a See also: modern edition, with notes, an introduction and appendix, by Lecestre (See also: Paris, 1894-1895, 2 vols.)
.
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