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COMTE See also: born at See also: Metz on the 15th of See also: February 1754, the son of a magistrate
.
At the age of twenty-five he became councillor at the See also: parlement of Metz, and was commissioned in 1787 to draw up a See also: list of remonstrances
.
His See also: work advocating the suppression of See also: internal customs houses (Suppression See also: des douanes interieures), published the same See also: year, is an elaborate See also: treatise on the See also: laws of commerce and on the theory of customs imposts
.
In 1788 he published Deputation aux Etats generaux, a pamphlet remarkable for its bold exposition of liberal principles, and partly on the strength of this he was elected deputy to the states-general by the Third Estate of the bailliage of Metz
.
In the Constituent See also: Assembly he was a member of the committee of taxes (comite des contributions), prepared a scheme for a new See also: system of See also: taxation, See also: drew up a See also: law on See also: patents, occupied himself with the laws See also: relating to stamps and assignats, and was successful in opposing the introduction of an income tax
.
After the close of the Constituent Assembly he was elected, on the 11th of See also: November 1791, procureur general syndic of the department of See also: Paris
.
The See also: directory of the department, of which the duc de la Rochefoucauld was president, was at this See also: time in pronounced opposition to the advanced views that dominated the Legislative Assembly and the Jacobin See also: Club, and Roederer was not altogether in touch with his colleagues
.
Thus he took no share in See also: signing their protest against the law against the non-juring See also: clergy, as a violation of religious liberty
.
But the directory did not long survive
.
With the growing anarchy of the capital many of its members resigned and fled, and their places could not be filled up
.
Roederer himself has See also: left in his Chronique des cinquante jours (1832) an account of the pitiable See also: part played by the directory of the department in the critical See also: period between the loth of See also: June and the loth of See also: August 1792
.
Seeing the perilous See also: drift of things, he had tried to get into touch with the See also: king; and it was on his advice that
See also: Louis, on the fatal loth, took
See also: refuge in the Assembly
.
His conduct arousing suspicion, he went into hiding, and did not emerge again until after the fall of Robespierre . In 1796 he was made a member of the Institute, was appointed to a professorship ofSee also: political See also: economy, and founded the Journal d'economie publique, de morale et de legislation
.
Having escaped See also: deportation at the time of the coup d'etat of 18 Fructidor, he took part in the revolution of 18 See also: Brumaire, and was appointed by See also: Napoleon member of the council of See also: state and senator
.
Under the See also: Empire, Roederer, whose public influence was very considerable, was See also: Joseph See also: Bonaparte's See also: minister of See also: finance at Naples (18o6), See also: administrator of the See also: grand duchy of See also: Berg (181o), and imperial commissary in the See also: south of See also: France
.
During the See also: Hundred Days he was created a peer of France
.
The Restoration See also: government stripped him of his offices and dignities, but he recovered the title of peer of France in 1832
.
He died on the 17th of See also: December 1835
.
His son, Baron See also: Antoine See also: Marie Roederer
(1782—1865), was also a politician of some note in his See also: day
.
Among P
.
L
.
Roederer's writings may be mentioned Louis XII
.
(182o) ; See also: Francois I
.
(1825); Comedies historiques (1827–p) ; L'Esprit de la revolution de 1789 (1831); La Premiere et la deux¢eme annee du consulat de Bonaparte (18o2); Chronique des cinquante jours, an account of the events of the loth of August 1792; and Memoire pour servir a l'histoire de la societe polie en France (1835) . See his fEuvres, edited by his son (Paris, 1853 seq.); Sainte-Beuve, Causeries du lundi, vol. viii.; M . Mignet, Notices historiques (Paris, 1853) . |
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