Jacques Pierre Brissot
Jacques Pierre Brissot de Warville (15 January 1754 – 31 October 1793) was a leading member of the Girondist movement during the French Revolution.
Biography
Following the outbreak of the revolution, Brissot became the editor of Le Patriote Français, a prominent newspaper at the time. Under Brissot, the Girondists supported wars against the neighbouring monarchies and a federalist government in the style of the newly-formed United States. He also rallied the National Legislative Assembly to declare war on Austria in 1792.
Initially, the war proved disastrous for France, and the governing Girondists fell from grace. The Jacobins became more powerful, and the National Guard under François Hanriot surrounded the National Convention in May 1793. Armed with cannons, Hanriot demanded that the Girondists were arrested. The deputies of the Convention complied, and Brissot and several Girondists were imprisoned. Brissot was guillotined on 31 October 1793, and his head was kept in the Conciergerie.
In 1794, the Assassin Arno Dorian retrieved Brissot's head and gave it to Marie Tussaud, a sculptor charged with producing death masks of famous victims of the guillotine.