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COMTE JEAN DENIS LANJUINAIS (1753-1827)

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 182 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COMTE
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JEAN DENIS LANJUINAIS (1753-1827)
  , French politician, was born at
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Rennes (Ille-et-Vilaine) on the '2th of March 1753 . After a brilliant college career, which made him doctor of
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laws and a qualified
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barrister at nineteen, he was appointed counsel to the Breton estates and in 1795 professor of ecclesiastical law at Rennes . At this period he wrote two important
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works which, owing to the distracted state of public affairs, remained unpublished, Institutiones
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juris ecclesiastici and Praelectiones juris ecclesiastici . He had begun his career at the bar by pleading against the feudal droit du colombier, and when he was sent by his
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fellow-citizens to the states-general of 1789 he demanded the abolition of
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nobility and the substitution of the title of king of the French and the Navarrese for king of France and Navarre, and helped to establish the
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civil constitution of the clergy . Returned to the Convention in September 1792 he
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developed moderate, even reactionary views, becoming one of the fiercest opponents of the Mountain, though he never wavered in his support of republican principles . He refused to
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vote for the
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death of Louis XVI., alleging that the nation had no right to despatch a vanquished prisoner . His daily attacks on the Mountain resulted, on the 15th of
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April 1793, in a demandby the commune for his exclusion from the assembly, but, undaunted, when the Parisian populace invaded the Chamber on the 2nd of
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June, Lan juinais renewed his
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defiance of the victorious party . Placed under arrest with the Girondins, he escaped to Rennes where he drew up a pamphlet denouncing the constitution of 1793 under the curious title Le Dernier Crime de Lanjuinais (Rennes, 1793) . Pursued by J . B . Carrier, who was sent to stamp out resistance in the west, he
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lay hidden until some time after the revolution of Thermidor (
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July 1794), but he was re-admitted to the Convention on the 8th of March 1795 . He maintained his liberal and
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independent attitude in the Conseil
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des Anciens, the Senate and the Chamber of Peers, being president of the upper house during the
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Hundred Days .

Together with G . J . B .

Target, J . E . M . Portalis and others he founded under the
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empire an academy of legislation in Paris, himself lecturing on
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Roman law . Closely associated with
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oriental scholars, and a keen student of oriental religions, he entered the Academy of Inscriptions in i8o8 . After the Bourbon restoration Lanjuinais consistently defended the principles of constitutional monarchy, but most of his time was given to religious and
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political subjects . Besides many contributions to periodical literature he wrote, among other works, Constitutions de la nation francaise (1819); Appreciation du projet de loi relatif aux trois concordats (i8o6, 6th ed . 1827), in defence of
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Gallicanism; and Etudes biographiques et litteraires sur Antoine
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Arnauld, P . Nicole et Jacques Necker (1823) .

He died in Paris on the 13th of

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January 1827 . His son, VICTOR AMBROISE, VICOMTE DE LANJUINAIS (1802-1869), was also a politician, becoming a deputy in '838 . His interests lay chiefly in
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financial questions and in 1849 he became minister of commerce and agriculture in the
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cabinet of Odilon Barrot . He wrote a
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Notice historique sur la
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vie et
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les ouvrages du comte de Lanjuinais, which was prefixed to an edition of his
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father's Euvres (4 vols., 1832) . For the
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life of the comte de Lanjuinais see also A . Robert and G . Cougny, Dictionnaire des parlementaires, vol. ii . (189o); and F . A . Aulard, Les Orateurs de la Legislative et de la Convention (Paris, 1885-'886) . For a bibliography of his works see J . M .

Querard, La France litteraire, vol. iii . (1829) .

End of Article: COMTE JEAN DENIS LANJUINAIS (1753-1827)
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