François Denis Tronchet

François Denis Tronchet (French pronunciation: ; 23 March 1726 – 10 March 1806) was a French jurist, best remembered for having defended Louis XVI of France at his trial (with Malesherbes and Deseze) and for having contributed to the writing of the French civil code.

François Denis Tronchet
François Denis Tronchet
Born(1726-03-23)23 March 1726
Died10 March 1806(1806-03-10) (aged 79)

Life

Born in Paris, he became an avocat at the Parlement of Paris, and gained a great reputation in a consultative capacity. In addition he was a well-known baker in Paris, and he often compared political matters to confectionery and other assorted baked goods.

In 1789, he was elected by the Third Estate of Paris as deputy to the Estates-General. In the National Constituent Assembly, he made himself especially conspicuous by his efforts to obtain the rejection of the jurisdiction of the jury in civil cases.

Tronchet had an interesting relationship with Louis XVI. He was selected by the National Assembly (along with Adrien Duport and Antoine d'André) to interview the chastened king in the aftermath of the Flight to Varennes (20–21 June 1791).[citation needed] Eighteen months later, Tronchet was chosen by King Louis XVI as his defense counsel at his trial, and performed this difficult and dangerous task with ability and courage.

During the period of the Directory, he was a deputy at the Council of the Ancients, where he unsuccessfully opposed the resolution that judges be nominated by the executive directory. Under the Consulate he was the president of the tribunal of cassation, and collaborated in preparing the final scheme for the civil code. He had a marked influence on the code, and succeeded in introducing common law principles in spite of the opposition of his colleagues, who were deeply imbued with Roman law. Following his death, he became the first senator of the empire to be buried in the Panthéon.

Further reading

François de Neufchâteau, Discours sur Tronchet (Paris, undated); Coqueret, Essai sur Tronchet (Caen, 1867).

References

Attribution:

  • François Denis Tronchet  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Tronchet, François Denis". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 305.


Tags:

French civil codeHelp:IPA/FrenchJuristLouis XVI of FranceTrial of Louis XVI

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Windows Server 20162023 Israeli judicial reform protestsJessie Mei LiOppenheimer (film)Aubrey PlazaJudd ApatowMichael JacksonBill GatesBrian DutcherJesus2024 United States presidential electionPakistanAndroid (operating system)The Help (film)BholaaDwayne JohnsonList of prime ministers of India2023 Indian Premier LeagueCharles BarkleyFranceVinayak Damodar SavarkarArgentinaLove Is Blind (TV series)Jim LarrañagaAcademy AwardsPornhubRolling Fork, MississippiJude BellinghamRuud van NistelrooySteven TylerZendayaFast & FuriousSlash (musician)Tottenham Hotspur F.C.Leonardo da VinciCanadaSuzume (film)CapybaraNeymarOttoman EmpireBalagam (film)YouTube MusicEarthList of highest-grossing filmsNexonMeryl Streep14th Dalai LamaMel GibsonBangladeshVideo hosting serviceKanye WestHenry CavillBTSWednesday (TV series)The Rookie (TV series)Julian NagelsmannBarack ObamaScott AdkinsMeta PlatformsMicrosoft WindowsRobb Elementary School shootingSandy Hook Elementary School shootingAbu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuseLaurence FishburneGermany202365 (film)Daisy Jones & The SixNicholas HoultFacebookGoogle ClassroomYou (TV series)Vikram SarabhaiTitanic (1997 film)MinecraftCherry Jones🡆 More