Jacques Antoine Marie de Cazalès

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Jacques Antoine Marie de Cazalès

Jacques Antoine Marie de Cazalès (February 1, 1758 – November 24, 1805) was a French orator and politician. De Cazalès was born at Grenade, Haute-Garonne to a family of the lower nobility.<ref name=EB1911>{{#if: |

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  }}{{#ifeq:  ||}}</ref> With his father as an adviser to the parliament of Toulouse, Cazalès undertook a career in the military, becoming captain of the dragoons at the age of 21.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In this political career, he proved to be a devout representative of the right, becoming the elected deputy of the nobility for the Verdun countries. His rightist ideals and orations made him political enemies, such as Barnarve, who scarred Cazalès in a duel. As a moderate conservative, Cazalès favored an intermediate system of government, between absolute and constitutional monarchy. It is not surprising that he was thus close to Edmund Burke, who held similar views, and served as a source of information and intelligence to British leaders during the French Revolution.<ref>See Thomas Macknight, History of the Life and Times of Edmund Burke Vol. 3 (London: Chapman and Hall, 1860) p. 439 </ref> Cazalès also tried to found a conservative-liberal party, along with Mirabeau.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref> His son, Edmond de Cazalès (fr), wrote philosophical and religious studies.<ref name=EB1911/>

Early life

de Cazalès was born at Grenade, Haute-Garonne, in a family of the lower nobility.

Cazalès was not very educated as a young man. His father, mostly concerned with his duties to parliament, had little time to secure Cazalès' education.<ref name=":0" /> With his studies suspended at twelve, the young Cazalès turned to a career in the military, and at fifteen years old, entered in a regiment of dragoons. He made an honest name for himself and by the age of 21, he would become a captain.

Cazalès, however, wanted to pursue a career outside of the military and so sought an education. He taught himself through the works of historians and publicists. With a special interest in law, he studied the history of English government. His fascination in government brought him to Montesquieu's school, where he studied the principles of government, liberty, and the separation of powers within government.<ref name=":0" />

Political career

In his early political life, Cazalès was imprisoned for his efforts against Parlement Maupeou.<ref name="Stephens">Template:Cite book</ref> In the Constituent Assembly he belonged to the section of moderate royalists who sought to set up a constitution on the British model, and his speeches in favour of retaining the right of war and peace in the king's hands and on the organization of the judiciary gained the applause even of his opponents.<ref name=EB1911/> Although he left few records of his speeches or his personal life, his political beliefs and ideologies were published in journals like the Moniteur. <ref name="Stephens"/>

Among Cazalès' beliefs was the belief that men were not equal and maintained the difference between active and passive citizens. He did not find it necessary to grant equality to slaves nor to women. One of his more prominent positions was that of private property, which he fought vigorously to protect in the Constituent Assembly, feeling that it is a "sacred and inviolable right."<ref name=":0" />

Apart from his eloquence, which gave him a place among the finest orators of the Assembly, Cazalès is mainly remembered for a duel fought with Barnave, in which Cazalès was wounded in the forehead. After the insurrection of August 10, 1792, which led to the downfall of royalty, Cazalès emigrated. He fought in the army of the émigrés against revolutionary France.<ref name=EB1911/> He later urged the Convention the privilege of defending Louis XVI before the court, publishing a remarkable argument in his defense.Template:Citation needed Back in France in 1803,<ref name=EB1911/> he lived with little public presence until his death in 1805.

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