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  1. Jacques Pierre Brissot

    Jacques Pierre Brissot

    French revolutionary

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  1. Jacques Pierre Brissot ( French pronunciation: [ʒak pjɛʁ bʁiso], 15 January 1754 – 31 October 1793), also known as Brissot de Warville was a French journalist, abolitionist, and revolutionary leading the faction of Girondins (initially called Brissotins) at the National Convention in Paris.

  2. Jacques-Pierre Brissot (born January 15, 1754, Chartres, France—died October 31, 1793, Paris) was a leader of the Girondins (often called Brissotins), a moderate bourgeois faction that opposed the radical-democratic Jacobins during the French Revolution.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Jacques Pierre Brissot ou Brissot de Warville, né le 15 janvier 1754 à Chartres et mort guillotiné le 31 octobre 1793 à Paris, est un journaliste et homme politique français, considéré comme un des chefs de file de la faction des girondins pendant la Révolution française.

  4. Jacques Pierre Brissot, also known as Brissot de Warville was a French journalist, abolitionist, and revolutionary leading the faction of Girondins at the National Convention in Paris.

  5. Jul 25, 2012 · The career of Jacques-Pierre Brissot (1754–1793) featured two phases, separated dramatically by the Revolution of 1789. Before the revolutionary crisis and the subsequent political struggle that was to cost him his life, Brissot was an avocet who never practised but sought instead a career as a writer—and indeed as a philosophe , seeing ...

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  7. Jacques-Pierre Brissot is best known as the leader of the Girondin faction during the French Revolution. His name is also usually associated with the beginning of the French revolutionary wars in 1792, and with the rise of the slave rebellion in the French colony of Saint Domingue from 1791 onwards. This is due in particular to his involvement ...

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