RICHELIEU (Armand-Désiré de Vignerot du Plessis... - Lot 69 - Osenat

Lot 69
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150 - 200 EUR
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Result : 288EUR
RICHELIEU (Armand-Désiré de Vignerot du Plessis... - Lot 69 - Osenat
RICHELIEU (Armand-Désiré de Vignerot du Plessis de). L.A.S. to one of the directors of the Management Board. Basle, 19 brumaire year 6e, November 9, 1797. 3 pp. bi-sheet in-4. Letter from the Duc d'Aiguillon requesting his removal from the list of emigrants and his return from exile to the Republic, emphasizing his former positions for the Revolution, " (...) I remember with gratitude the old marks of friendship that you have given me and the interest that you showed when my petition, attested by several representatives of the People and several officers of the troops that I commanded in 1792 in the Haut-Rhin, was submitted to the Directory (...). I hoped within my Fatherland and my family that the justice of the Government would soon grant me my definitive removal from the list of emigrants where the name of a friend of Liberty should never have been inscribed (...) "Former Colonel of the Royal-Polish Cavalry and commander of the light horses of the Guard, Peer of France in 1788, the Duke of Aiguillon (1761-1800) had distinguished himself as a deputy in the States-General, by rallying the Third State and enthusiastically following the Viscount de Noailles on the night of 4 August, on the abolition of privileges. Attached to the Duke of Orleans, it is said that he was at the origin of the events of 5 and 6 October, and followed the royal procession among the crowd disguised as a woman. He was with Boufflers and Barère de Vieuzac, Secretary of the Constituent Assembly, voted the first national loan, and the creation of the assignats, at the time of the declaration of war with Austria, he resumed his military career in the troops of Lafayette, Lückner and Rochambeau, replaced Custine at the head of the Army of the Rhine, occupying the gorges of Porentruy. Declared indictment for having condemned the uprising of August 10, he went into exile in Hamburg in October 1792, settling with the Lameth brothers, badly received by the emigrants, as one can imagine, he was
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