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See also: political economist, See also: father of the See also: great See also: Mirabeau, was See also: born at Pertuis, near the old chateau de Mirabeau, on the 4th of See also: October 1715
.
He was brought up very sternly by his father, and in 1728 joined the army
.
He took keenly to campaigning, but never See also: rose above the See also: rank of captain, owing to his being unable to get leave at See also: court to buy a regiment
.
In 1737 he came into the See also: family See also: property on his father's See also: death, and spent some pleasant years till 1743 in See also: literary companionship with duc Clapiers, See also: marquis de Vauvenargues and the poet Lefranc de Pompignan, which might have continued had he not deter-See also: mined to marry—not for See also: money, but for landed estates
.
The lady whose property he fancied was See also: Marie Genevieve, daughter of a M. de Vassan, a brigadier in the army, and widow of the marquis de Saulveboef, whom he married without previously seeing her on the 21st of See also: April 1743
.
While in garrison at See also: Bordeaux Mirabeau had made the acquaintance of Montesquieu, and after retiring from the army he wrote his first See also: work, his Testament Politique (1747), which demanded for the prosperity of See also: France a return of the French noblesse to their old position in the See also: middle ages
.
This work was followed in 175o by a See also: book on the Utilitedes etats provenciaux, which was attributed to Montesquieu himself
.
In 1756 Mirabeau made his first appearance as a political economist by the publication of his Ami See also: des hommes cu traite de la population
.
This work has been often attributed to the influence, and in See also: part even to the See also: pen, of See also: Quesnay, the founder of the economical school of the physiocrats, but was really written before the marquis had made the acquaintance of the physician of Madame de Pompadour
.
In 176o he published his Theorie de l'impot, in which he attacked with all the vehemence of his son the farmers-general of the taxes, who got him imprisoned for eight days at See also: Vincennes, and then exiled to his country estate at Bignon
.
At Bignon the school of the physiocrats was really established, and the marquis in 1765 bought the Journal de l'See also: agriculture, du commerce, et des finances, which became the See also: organ of the school
.
He was recognized as a See also: leader of political thinkers by See also: Prince Leopold of See also: Tuscany, afterwards emperor, and by Gustavus III. of Sweden, who in 1772 sent him the See also: grand See also: cross of the See also: order of See also: Vasa
.
But his See also: marriage had not been happy; he had separated from his wife in 1762, and had, he believed, secured her safely in the provinces by a lettre de cachet, when in 1772 she suddenly appeared in See also: Paris, and commenced proceedings for a separation
.
One of his own daughters had encouraged his wife to take this step
.
He was determined to keep the See also: case quiet, if possible, for the See also: sake of Mme de Pailly, a Swiss lady whom he had loved since 1756
.
But his wife would not let him rest; her plea was rejected in 1777, but she renewed her suit, and, though the great Mirabeau had pleaded his father's case, was successful in 1781
.
This trial quite broke the See also: health of the marquis, as well as his See also: fortune; he sold his estate at Bignon, and hired a See also: house at See also: Argenteuil, where he lived quietly till his death on the 11th of See also: July 1789
.
The marquis's younger See also: brother, See also: JEAN See also: ANTOINE RIQUETI, " the bailli " (d
.
1794), served with distinction in the See also: navy, but his brusque See also: manners made success at court impossible
.
In 1763 he became general of the galleys of See also: Malta
.
In 1767 he returned to France and took See also: charge of the chateau de Mirabeau, helping the marquis in his disastrous lawsuits
.
See See also: Louis de Lomenie's
See also: Les Mirabeau (2 vols., 1879)
.
Also See also: Henri Ripert, Le Marquis de Mirabeau, ses theories politiques et economiques, [these pour le doctorat] Paris (1901); Oncken, Der dltere Mirabeau and die pekonomische Gesellschaft in See also: Bern (Berne, 1886) ; De Lavergne, Les Economistes frangais du 18"" siecle
.
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