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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: FAT-FLA |
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FAUCHET, CLAUDE (1744-1793) , French revolutionary bishop
Roch , Paris, when he was engaged as tutor to the children of the marquis of Choiseul, brother of Louis XV.'s minister, an appointment which proved to be the first step to fortune. He was successively grand vicar
Montfort -Lacarre. The " philosophic " tone of his sermons caused his dismissal from court in 1788 before he became a popular speaker
Bastille , and on the 5th of August 1789 he delivered an eloquent discourse by way of funeral sermon'for the citizens slain on the 14th of July, taking as his text the words of St Paul, " Ye have been called to liberty." He blessed the tricolour flag for the National Guard, and in September was elected to the Commune, from which he retired in October 1790. During the next winter he organized within the Palais Royal the " Social Club of the Society of the Friends of Truth," presiding over crowded meetings under the self-assumed title of procureur general de la verite. Nevertheless, events were marching faster than his opinions, and the last occasion on which he carried his public with him was in a sermon preached at Notre Dame on the 14th of February 1791. In May he became constitutional bishop
Calvados
movement
See Mernoires . ou Lettees de Claude Fauchet (5th ed., 1793) ; Notes sur Claude Fauchet (Caen, 1842). End of Article: FAUCHET, CLAUDE (1744-1793) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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