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Bertrand Barère de Vieuzac : ウィキペディア英語版
Bertrand Barère

Bertrand Barère de Vieuzac (10 September 1755 – 13 January 1841) was a French politician, freemason,〔Histoire des journaux et des journalistes de la révolution française (1789-1796) By Léonard Gallois〕 journalist, and one of the most notorious members of the National Convention during the French Revolution.
==Early career==
He was born at Tarbes in Gascony. The name ''Barère de Vieuzac'', by which he continued to call himself long after the renunciation of feudal rights on the 4 August abolition of feudalism, came from a small fief belonging to his father, a lawyer at Vieuzac. Barère's father, Jean Barère, was a procurator and a lawyer. Barère’s mother, Jeanne-Catherine Marrast, was of old nobility.〔Gershoy 1962, p.4.〕 When Barère was a child, he went to a parish school, and when he and his siblings were of age, his brother, Jean-Pierre, became a priest.〔Gershoy 1962, p.8.〕 After finishing school, Barère attended a college before he began his career in revolutionary politics. He began to practice as a lawyer at the ''parlement'' of Toulouse in 1770, and soon earned a reputation as an orator, while his fame as an essayist led to his election as a member of the Academy of Floral Games of Toulouse in 1788.
He married at the age of thirty. Four years later (1789), he was elected deputy by the estates of Bigorre to the Estates-General — he had made his first visit to Paris in the preceding year. Barère de Vieuzac at first belonged to the constitutional party, but he was less known as a speaker in the National Constituent Assembly than as a journalist. His paper, the ''Point du Jour'', according to François Victor Alphonse Aulard, owed its reputation not so much to its own qualities as to the fact that the painter Jacques-Louis David, in his sketch of the Tennis Court Oath, showed Barère kneeling in the corner and writing a report of the proceedings for posterity.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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