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Jean Joseph de Laborde

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Occupation
  
French politician

Name
  
Jean-Joseph Laborde

Role
  
French Politician


Jean-Joseph de Laborde

Born
  
1724
near Jaca in Aragon

Died
  
April 18, 1794, Paris, France

Similar People
  
Louis Philippe II - Duke of O, Madame du Barry, Louis XVI of France, Georges Danton, Maximilien Robespierre

Jean-Joseph, marquis de Laborde (29 January 1724 – 18 April 1794) was a French politician.

Contents

Jean-Joseph de Laborde httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Biography

Laborde was born near Jaca in Aragon, into a modest béarnaise family. When he reached adolescence he joined his uncle, who was head of a maritime import-export company at Saint-Jean-de-Luz, and took over as head of the business on the cousin's death. He based his subsequent fortune not only on this company, but also on transatlantic trade (supplying the American colonies with basics, in return for far more financially interesting products such as tropical fruits, rare trees and slaves) and his sugar plantations on Saint-Domingue (Haïti).

His dazzling rise, comparable to that of several bourgeois men of the age of Enlightenment, gained him promotion to noble rank and allowed him to acquire several estates. He became fermier général (1759–1767) on the suggestion of his friend the duc de Choiseul. He took up residence in the château de La Ferté-Vidame in 1764, redecorating it to his taste and commissioning several artists. However, following a game of musical chairs, he lost it in 1784 to the duc de Penthièvre, who had himself lost his domaine de Rambouillet to king Louis XV, who coveted its "terres giboyeuses" or wooded hunting lands. Laborde was named marquis and in 1784 acquired the castle of Méréville, rebuilding it to his taste.

In politics, he was ahead of his time and of the French Revolution, and (with Mirabeau) was one of the only noble députés (from the bailliage d'Étampes) to accept demotion to the Third Estate upon the Revolution. However, this was not enough to save him from being guillotined under the "loi des suspects" on the orders of Louis de Saint-Just, in one of the last fits of the Reign of Terror in May 1794. In 1792 much of the fabulous Orleans Collection of paintings was briefly his, before he was forced by events to abandon his ambition to exhibit them in his Paris house, and sold them.

Laborde died in 1794 in Paris.

Descendents

  • Edouard-Jean-Joseph de Laborde Marchainville (1762-1786), a member of the Lapérouse expedition, who drowned, along with his brother, in Lituya Bay, Alaska
  • Pauline de Laborde (1765–1782), married Jean-François Pérusse, 1st duc des Cars
  • Ange-Auguste-Joseph de Laborde Boutervilliers (1766-1786), a member of the Lapérouse expedition, who drowned, along with his brother, in Lituya Bay, Alaska
  • Nathalie de Laborde (1774–1835), married Charles de Noailles, duc de Mouchy, was la petite mouche among the many mistresses of Chateaubriand
  • Alexandre de Laborde, archaeologist, soldier and politician, who continued his father's Revolutionary political views
  • References

    Jean-Joseph de Laborde Wikipedia