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CHEVALIER FRANCOIS EMMANUEL GUIGNARD ...

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 42 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHEVALIER FRANCOIS EMMANUEL GUIGNARD SAINT PRIEST  , then COMTE DE (1735-1821), French statesman, was born at
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Grenoble on the 12th of March 1735 . He was admitted a knight (chevalier) of the Order of Malta at five years of age, and at fifteen entered the army . He
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left active service in 1763 with the grade of colonel, and for the next four years represented the court of France at Lisbon . He was sent in 1768 to Constantinople, where he remained with one short
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interval till 1785, and married Wilhelmina von Ludolf, daughter of the Neapolitan ambassador . His Memoires sur l'ambassade de France en Turquie et le commerce
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des Francais clans le
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Levant, prepared during a visit to France, were only published in 1877, when they were edited by C . Schefer . After a few months spent at the court of the Hague, he joined the
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ministry of Necker as minister without a portfolio, and in Necker's second
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cabinet in 1789 was secretary of the royal household and minister of the interior . He became a
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special
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object of the popular hatred because he was alleged to have replied to
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women begging for
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bread, " You had enough while you had only one king; demand bread of your twelve
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hundred sovereigns." Nevertheless he held office until December 1790 . Shortly after his resignation he went to
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Stockholm, where his
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brother-in-law was
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Austrian ambassador . In 1795 he joined the comte de Provence at Verona as minister of the household . He accompanied the exiled court to
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Blankenburg and Mittau, retiring in 18o8 to
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Switzerland . After vainly seeking permission to return to France he was expelled from Switzerland, and wandered about
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Europe until the Restoration .

Besides the

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memoirs already mentioned he wrote an Examen des assemblies provinciales (1787) . His eldest son, GUILLAUME EMMANUEL (1776-1814), became major-general in the
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Russian service, and served in the
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campaigns of Alexander I. against
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Napoleon . He died at
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Laon in 1814 . The second, ARMAND EMMANUEL CHARLES (1782-1863), became
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civil governor of
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Odessa, and married Princess Sophie Galitzin . The third, EMMANUEL LOUIS
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MARIE GUIGNARD, vicomte de Saint Priest (1789-1881), was a godson of Marie Antoinette . Like his elder brother he took
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part in the invasion of France in 1814 . At the Restoration he was attached to the service of the duke of Angoulelne, and during the Hundred Days tried to raise
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Dauphine in the royal cause . He served with distinction in Spain in 1823, when he was promoted
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lieutenant-general . After two years at Berlin he became French ambassador at
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Madrid, where he negotiated in 1828 the settlement of the
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Spanish debt . When the revolution of
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July compelled his retirement, Frederick VII. made him a grandee of Spain, with the title of duke of Almazan, in recognition of his services . He then joined the circle of the duchess of Berry at Naples, and arranged her escapade in Provence in 1832 . Saint Priest was arrested, and was only released after ten months' imprisonment .

Having arranged for an

asylum in Austria for the duchess, he returned to Paris, where he was one of the leaders of legitimist society until his
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death, which occurred at Saint Priest, near Lyons, on the 26th of
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February 1881 .

End of Article: CHEVALIER FRANCOIS EMMANUEL GUIGNARD SAINT PRIEST
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