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・ Antoine Cervetti
・ Antoine Changuion
・ Antoine Chanzy
・ Antoine Chappey
・ Antoine Charles IV de Gramont
・ Antoine Charles Louis de Lasalle
・ Antoine Chartier de Lotbinière Harwood
・ Antoine Chazal
・ Antoine Chessex
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・ Antoine Choquet de Lindu
・ Antoine Choueiri
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Antoine Claire Thibaudeau
・ Antoine Clamaran
・ Antoine Claraz
・ Antoine Claudet
・ Antoine Clot
・ Antoine Clériadus de Choiseul-Beaupré
・ Antoine Coiffier de Ruzé, marquis d'Effiat
・ Antoine Compagnon
・ Antoine Conte
・ Antoine Cordonnier
・ Antoine Cormery
・ Antoine Court
・ Antoine Court de Gébelin
・ Antoine Courtois
・ Antoine Coypel


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Antoine Claire Thibaudeau : ウィキペディア英語版
Antoine Claire Thibaudeau

Antoine Claire, Comte Thibaudeau (23 March 1765, Poitiers – 8 March 1854) was a French politician.
==Life==
He was the son of Antoine de Thibaudeau (1739–1813), who was a lawyer of Poitiers and a deputy to the Estates-General of 1789. He was admitted to the bar in 1787, and in 1789 accompanied his father to the Estates-General at Versailles. When he returned to Poitiers in October he immediately set up a local revolutionary club, and in 1792 was returned as a deputy to the National Convention.
Thibaudeau joined the party of the Mountain and voted for the death of Louis XVI unconditionally. Nevertheless he incurred a certain amount of suspicion because he declined to join the Jacobin Club. In May 1793 he was on a special mission in the west and prevented his ''département'' from joining the Federalist movement. Thibaudeau occupied himself more particularly with educational business, notably in the organization of the museum of the Louvre. It was he who secured the inclusion of Tom Paine's name in the amnesty of Girondist deputies.
Secretary and then president of the Convention for a short period, he served on the Committee of Public Safety and of General Security. After the royalist insurrection of 13 Vendémiaire (5 October 1795) he opposed those Thermidorians who wished to postpone the dissolution of the Convention. At the elections for the ''Corps Législatif'' he was elected by no less than thirty-two ''départements''. It was only by the intervention of Boulay de la Meurthe that he escaped transportation after the ''coup d'etat'' of 18 Fructidor (4 September 1797), and he then returned to the practice of his profession.
The establishment of the Consulate brought him back to public life. He was made prefect of the Gironde, and then member of the council of state, in which capacity he worked on the civil code. He at this time had Napoleon's confidence, and gave him wholehearted support. He did not entirely conceal his disapproval of the foundation of the Légion d'Honneur, of the Concordat and of Napoleon's acceptance of the Consulate for life, and his appointment as prefect of the Bouches-du-Rhône, with consequent banishment from Paris, was a semi-disgrace.
A peer of the Hundred Days, he fled at the second Restoration to Lausanne. During his exile he lived in Vienna, Prague, Augsburg and Brussels, occupying himself with his ''Mémoires sur la Convention et le Directoire'' (Paris, 2 vols., 1824); ''Mémoires sur le Consulat: par un ancien conseiller d'état'' (Paris, 1827); ''Histoire générale de Napoléon Bonaparte'' (6 vols., Paris and Stuttgart, 1827–28, vol. iii. not printed); ''Le Consulat et l'Empire'', vol. i. of which is identical with vol. vi. of the ''Histoire de Napoléon'' (10 vols., 1834). The revolution of 1830 permitted his return to France, and he lived to become a member of the Imperial Senate under the Second Empire.
He died in Paris on 8 March 1854 in his eighty-ninth year.

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