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Fouquier-Tinville

[ foo-kyey-tan-veel ]

noun

  1. An·toine Quen·tin [ah, n, -, twan, kah, n, -, tan], 1747?–95, French revolutionist: prosecutor during the Reign of Terror.


Fouquier-Tinville

/ fukjetɛ̃vil /

noun

  1. Fouquier-TinvilleAntoine Quentin17461795MFrenchPOLITICS: revolutionary Antoine Quentin (ɑ̃twan kɑ̃tɛ̃). 1746–95, French revolutionary; as public prosecutor (1793–94) during the Reign of Terror, he sanctioned the guillotining of Desmoulins, Danton, and Robespierre
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Example Sentences

Knowing the characters of Robespierre, of Saint-Just, of Fouquier-Tinville, I should like to have seen them revenge themselves a little on those who triumphed over them.

He brought about the accusation of Fouquier-Tinville, and of J. B. Carrier, the deportation of B. Bar�re, and the arrest of the last Montagnards.

Weigh all this, and say whether Fouquier-Tinville did anything worse.

But they gave him for public prosecutor one Raoux, a little wizened wisp of a man, a shoemaker and bold orator of the bars, who in his readiness of denunciation threw Fouquier-Tinville into the shade, and in irreverence and insolence approached Raoul Rigault himself.

Aided by famine, by the suppression of the maximum, and by the imminent bankruptcy of the assignats, they endeavoured to arouse the working classes and the former Hanriot companies against a government which was trying to destroy the republic, and had broken the busts of Marat and guillotined Carrier and Fouquier-Tinville, the former public prosecutor.

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