Camille Jordan (politician), Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Camille Jordan (politician)

French politician

Date of Birth: 11-Jan-1771

Place of Birth: Lyon, Auvergne-RhĂ´ne-Alpes, France

Date of Death: 19-May-1821

Profession: politician

Nationality: France

Zodiac Sign: Capricorn


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About Camille Jordan (politician)

  • Camille Jordan (11 January 1771 in Lyon – 19 May 1821) was a French politician born in Lyon of a well-to-do mercantile family. Jordan was educated in Lyon, and from an early age was imbued with royalist principles.
  • He actively supported by voice, pen and musket his native town in its resistance to the Convention; and when Lyon fell, in October 1793, Jordan fled.
  • From Switzerland he passed in six months to England, where he formed acquaintances with other French exiles and with prominent British statesmen, and imbibed a lasting admiration for the English Constitution. In 1796 he returned to France, and next year he was sent by Lyon as a deputy to the Council of the Five Hundred.
  • There his eloquence won him consideration.
  • He earnestly supported what he felt to be true freedom, especially in matters of religious worship, though the energetic appeal on behalf of church bells in his Rapport sur la libertĂ© des cultes procured him the sobriquet of "Jordan-Cloche".
  • Proscribed at the coup d'Ă©tat of the 18th Fructidor (4 September 1797) he escaped to Basel.
  • Thence he went to Germany, where he met Goethe. Back again in France by 1800, he boldly published in 1802 his Vrai sens du vote national pour le consulat Ă  vie, in which he exposed the ambitious schemes of Bonaparte.
  • He was unmolested, however, and during the First Empire lived in literary retirement at Lyon with his wife and family, producing for the Lyon academy occasional papers on the Influence rĂ©ciproque de l'Ă©loquence sur la RĂ©volution et de la RĂ©volution sur l'Ă©loquence; Etudes sur Klopstock, etc. At the restoration in 1814 he again emerged into public life.
  • By Louis XVIII he was ennobled and named a councillor of state; and from 1816 he sat in the chamber of deputies as representative of Am.
  • At first he supported the ministry, but when they began to show signs of reaction he separated from them, and gradually came to be at the head of the constitutional opposition.
  • His speeches in the chamber were always eloquent and powerful.
  • Though warned by failing health to resign, Camille Jordan remained at his post till his death at Paris, on 19 May 1821. To his pen we owe Lettre Ă  M.
  • Laniourette (1791); Histoire de la conversion d'une dame parisienne (1792); La Loi et la religion vengĂ©es (1792); Adresse Ă  ses commettants sur la RĂ©volution du 4 Septembre 1797 (I797); Sur les troubles de Lyon (1818); La Session de 1817 (1818).
  • His Discours were collected in 1818.
  • The "Fragments choisis," and translations from the German, were published in L'Abeille française.
  • Besides the histories of the time, see further details vol.
  • x.
  • of the Revue encyclopĂ©dique; a paper on Jordan and Madame de StaĂ«l, by Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve, in the Revue des deux mondes for March 1868 and R Boubbe, "Camille Jordan Ă  Weimar," in the Correspondance (1901), ccv.
  • 718–738 and 948–970.

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