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Encyclopedia > Charles Henri Sanson

Charles Henri Sanson (1739 - 1806), public executioner of Paris from 1788 to 1795, was the great grandson of Charles Sanson de Longval (born before 1658, died in 1707), who received the office of executeur des hautes oeuvres de Paris in 1688, which became hereditary in his family. He ceased his profession in 1699. His son, also named Charles and born in 1681, became deputy executioner in 1696, inofficial executioner in 1699 and received the "provision letters" of the official executioner of Paris in 1707. He died in 1726. His widdow and second wife Anne Marthe Dubut became official titular of the executioner of Paris, and François Prudhomme, her second husband, had the official charge of the "executioner of the city, provost and viscount of Paris" until her son Charles Jean Baptiste Sanson (born in 1719) reached the age of 20 years. He hold the office up to 1754, when a palsy or paralysis stopped his carreer. His son Charles Henri Sanson, the fourth of that name, didn't like his ancestors profession and preferred the occupation of a physician. But he had to take over his father's office in 1754 due to his father's disease at an age of fifteen when already studying at Leiden. Charles Henri Sanson was aided by his uncle Gaston and received the "red cloak", the sign of the executioner of Paris, in 1788. His first own execution was that of Robert-François Damiens. // About the number 1739 1739 is the smallest integer that can be written as sum of three perfect cubes, in two ways. ... 1806 was a common year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar). ... A judicial executioner is a person who carries out a death sentence ordered by the state or other legal authority, which was known in feudal terminology as high justice. ... City flag City coat of arms Motto: Fluctuat nec mergitur (Latin: Tossed by the waves, she does not sink) Location Coordinates Time Zone CET (GMT +1) Administration Country France Région ÃŽle-de-France Département Paris (75) Subdivisions 20 arrondissements Mayor Bertrand Delanoë  (PS) (since 2001) City Statistics Land... 1788 was a leap year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar). ... 1795 was a common year starting on Thursday (see link for calendar). ... // Events A high-powered conspiracy of notables, the Immortal Seven, invite William and Mary to depose James II of England. ... Events January 26 - Treaty of Karlowitz signed March 30 - the tenth Sikh Master, Guru Gobind Singh created the Khalsa. ... Events March 4 - Charles II of England grants a land charter to William Penn for the area that will later become Pennsylvania. ... 1754 was a common year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar). ... 1788 was a leap year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar). ... Robert-François Damiens Robert-François Damiens (1715-1757) was a Frenchman who attained notoriety by unsuccessfully attempting the assassination of Louis XV of France in 1757. ...


In the last days of 1789 Gorsas in the Courtier de Paris accused Sanson of harbouring a Royalist press in his house. Sanson was brought to trial, but acquitted, and Gorsas withdrew the accusation. After the execution of Louis XVI, a statement by Sanson was inserted in the Thermométre politique (13 February 1793) in contradiction of the false statements made in respect of the king's behaviour when confronted with death. He surrendered his office in 1795 to his son Henri (born in 1767), who had been his deputy for some time, and held his father's office until his death in 1840. His younger brother Gabriel (born in 1769) was deputy to his elder brother since 1790 and died from an accident at work of falling down from the scaffold while presenting a cut off head in 1792. There is no record of the elder Sanson's death. Henri's son Clement Henri was the last of the family to hold the office up to 1847. Louis XVI of France Louis XVI (23 August 1754 – 21 January 1793) was King of France and Navarre from 1774 until 1791, and then King of the French from 1791 to 1792. ... February 13 is the 44th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. ... 1793 was a common year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar). ... 1795 was a common year starting on Thursday (see link for calendar). ... 1840 is a leap year starting on Wednesday (link will take you to calendar). ... 1847 was a common year starting on Friday (see link for calendar). ...


The romantic tales told of C.H. Sanson have their origin in the apocryphal Mémoires pour servir a l'histoire de la Revolution Française par Sanson (2 vols., 1829; another ed., 1831), of which a few pages of introduction emanate from Balzac, and some other matter from Lheritier de l'Ain. Other Memoires of Sanson, edited by A. Gregoire (ps. for V. Lombard) in 1830, and by M. d'Olbreuze (6 vols., 1862—1863) are equally fictitious. The few facts definitely ascertainable are collected by G. Lenotre in La Guillotine pendant la Revolution (1893). Cf. M. Tourneux, Bibliographie de l'histoire de Paris... (1890, &c.), vol. i. Nos. 3963-3965, and vol. iv. Honoré de Balzac Honoré de Balzac (May 20, 1799 - August 18, 1850), was a French novelist. ...


References

  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Charles Henri Sanson - LoveToKnow 1911 (290 words)
Sanson was brought to trial, but acquitted, and Gorsas withdrew the accusation.
After the execution of Louis XVI., a statement by Sanson was inserted in the Thermometre politique (13th February 1793) in contradiction of the false statements made in respect of the king's behaviour when confronted with death.
Henri's son Clement Henri was the last of the family to hold the office.
Nicolas Sanson - LoveToKnow 1911 (412 words)
NICOLAS SANSON (1600-1667), French cartographer, wrongly termed by some the creator of French geography, was born of an old Picardy family of Scottish descent, at Abbeville, on the 10th (or 31st) of December 1600, and was educated by the Jesuits at Amiens.
In 1647 Sanson accused the Jesuit Labbe of plagiarizing him in his Pharus Galliae Antiquae; in 1648 he lost his eldest son Nicolas, killed during the Fronde.
Sanson's principal works are: Galliae antiquae descriptio geographica (1627); Graeciae antiquae descriptio (1636); L'Empire romain (1637); Britannia, ou recherches de l'antiquite d'Abbeville (1638), in which he seeks to identify Strabo's Britannia with Abbeville; La France ((1644); Tables methodiques pour les divisions des Gaules.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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