Jacques René Hébert (November 15, 1757—March 24, 1794) was editor of the extreme radical newspaper Le Père Duchesne during the French Revolution. His followers are usually referred to as the Hébertists or the Hébertistes; he himself is sometimes called Père Duchesne, after his newspaper.
In 1790, he attracted attention through some pamphlets he published, and became a prominent member of the club of the Cordeliers in 1791.
His violent attacks on the Girondist presence in the National Convention led to his arrest on May 24, 1793, but he was released owing to the threatening attitude of the mob. His tone was further radicalised by the killing of Jean-Paul Marat in July 1793; his attacks on Marie Antoinette contributed to the mood of hostility towards her, and indirectly to her execution. Henceforth very popular, Hébert organized with Pierre Gaspard Chaumette the worship of Reason, in opposition to the theistic cult of the Supreme Being inaugurated by Maximilien Robespierre, against whom he tried to instigate a popular movement. The failure of this brought about the arrest of the Hébertists.
Hébert and his immediate followers, although certainly not all his sympathizers, were guillotined March 24, 1794, among the few to have become adversaries of Robespierre and the Committee of Public Safety for an excess of zeal rather than for any accusations of counter-revolutionary activity. It is said that Hebert was hysterical on his way to his execution and fainted at the sight of the guillotine. His wife, who had been a nun, was executed twenty days later.
1757 births | 1794 deaths | Natives of Basse-Normandie | Newspaper editors of the French Revolution | People executed by guillotine during the French Revolution
Jacques-René Hébert | Jacques-René Hébert | Jacques René Hébert | Jacques-René Hébert | Jacques-René Hébert | ジャック・ルネ・エベール | Jacques-René Hébert | Эбер, Жак Рене | Jacques Hébert | Jacques René Hébert
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