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Jean-Henri Voulland

French politician (1751–1801)


Summary

French politician (1751–1801)

FieldValue
officePresident of the National Convention
order32nd
imageVoulland.jpg
captionJean-Henri Voulland
predecessorGilbert Romme
successorGeorges Couthon
term_start6 December 1793
term_end21 December 1793
signatureSignature de Jean-Henri Voulland.jpg
partyThe Mountain
birth_date11 October 1751
birth_placeUzès, Languedoc, Kingdom of France
death_date
death_placeParis, France

Jean-Henri Voulland (11 October 1751, Uzès, Languedoc – 23 February 1801, Paris) was a politician of the French Revolution. Originating from a Protestant family, he originally studied law. One of his offices was as deputy for Gard in the National Convention, to which role he was elected on 5 September 1792. In September 1793 he was elected as a member of the Committee of General Security. He became part of the opposition to Robespierre and the Committee of Public Safety and played an important role in the overthrow of Robespierre on 9 Thermidor (27 July 1794).

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