Jean-Marie Calès

Jean-Marie Calès (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ ma.ʁi ka.lɛs]) was a French physician and politician in the period of the French Revolution. He was born on October 13, 1757, in Cessales (Haute-Garonne) and died on April 13, 1834, in Liège (Belgium).

Jean-Marie Calès
Deputy in the National Convention
for Haute-Garonne
In office
6 September 1792  26 October 1795
Parliamentary groupLeft wing (The Mountain)
Deputy in the Council of Five Hundred
for Haute-Garonne
In office
15 October 1795  20 May 1798
Member of the Committee of General Security
In office
5 March 1795  26 October 1795
Personal details
Born(1757-10-13)October 13, 1757
Cessales (Haute-Garonne)
 Kingdom of France
DiedApril 13, 1834(1834-04-13) (aged 76)
Liège
 Kingdom of Belgium
ProfessionPhysician

Biography

Jean-Marie Calès was a deputy of Haute-Garonne at the two first republican assemblies in French history, the National Convention from 1792 to 1795 and the Council of Five Hundred from 1795 to 1798, and a member as well of the Committee of General Security in 1795.[1] He was also appointed Representative on mission by the Convention between 1793 and 1795 and sent to the départements of Ardennes, of Côte D'Or and of Doubs. He retired from political life in 1798, before being banned from the French territory as regicide under the Restoration of monarchy in 1816.

Although having voted for the death of King Louis XVI, the representative of the Mountain Calès was however a moderate revolutionary. Nourished by the renovating ideas characterizing the pre-revolutionary Age of Enlightenment, he did not support any of the radical measures taken during the Reign of Terror and even pronounced himself against Robespierre during the events of the 9 Thermidor. His parliamentary activity was particularly characterized by his reforming vision of society and of the institutions, which was particularly reflected in his innovative proposals on the future constitutions (Constitution of Year I and Constitution of Year III), on public education and on the place of women in the new society. As a Representative on mission, he was also very effective in the administrative work of organization, logistics, law enforcement and industrial development in the regions. Until his last hours,[2] he never betrayed his republican and humanist ideals and maintained a constant hostility towards the scornful nobility and the obscurantist clergy, as well as a fine understanding of the difficulties of the people.[3] His republican heritage will be preserved throughout the whole 19th century in Haute-Garonne through the political work of his nephew Godefroy Calès, then of his grand-nephew Jean-Jules-Godefroy Calès, both Republicans representatives at the National Assemblies of 1848 and from 1885.[4]

He married, in October 1793, Marie-Sylphide Anne Poupardin[5] (widow of Gabriel-Étienne Poupardin du Rivage d'Orléans), born Chardron,[6] in Sedan in 1768 and deceased in 1828 in Liège, in exile alongside her husband Calès, with whom she had no children.

Portrait of Marie-Sylphide Calès by Julie Philipault, musée des Beaux-Arts d'Orléans

Calès died also in Liège in exile, six years later, on April 13, 1834, at the age of 76.

Youth

Jean-Marie Calès, « son of Jean Calès, alderman of Caraman, and of damsel Jeanne Rochas » was born on October 13, 1757, in Cessales, a small village in the region of Lauragais near Toulouse. Jean-Marie was the eldest son of 10 siblings,[7] and had two sisters and seven younger brothers. Several of his siblings were also prominent, including the second oldest brother, Jean Calès (1764–1840), who became Inspector-General of military hospitals, Jean-Chrysostôme Calès (1769–1853), the fourth oldest, who became colonel in the Great Army and baron of the 1st Empire (and also representative at the ephemeral Chamber of Representatives created by Napoleon during the period of the Hundred Days in 1815), and Jean Joseph Etienne Victorin Calès (1772–1853), the fifth oldest, who became a military officer. Their parents were landowners of Lauragais, from old Protestant families rooted in the region and forced to convert to Catholicism after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes issued by king Louis XIV in 1685.[8]

On the death of his father in 1785, Jean-Marie enrolled at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Toulouse. As a doctor, he settled down and practiced medicine in the small town of Revel (Haute-Garonne). He quickly became one of the correspondents of the Academy of Arras and wrote an « Art of Healing ».[9] He became at that time a fervent supporter of the Revolution, and was charged with performing administrative duties, including that of Procureur-syndic (magistrate who appeared during the French Revolution) of Revel, before being elected on September 9, 1791, Administrator of the department of Haute-Garonne.[10] But he refused this last position and, in his place, the electors chose his younger brother Jean Calès (1764–1840). Jean-Marie was also a member of the Society of the Friends of the Constitution (commonly known as the Jacobin Club) of Revel between 1791 and 1792.[11]

Installation of the Republic

Jean-Marie Calès ran in the legislative elections of September 6, 1792 and was elected deputy[12] at the National Convention by the department of Haute-Garonne. At the age of 34, he was the youngest of the 12 elected representatives of the departement.[13] These legislative elections, the first experience of universal suffrage in French History, were held in an extremely tense national context, less than a month only after the Insurrection of August 10, 1792 (attack and take of the Royal Palace of the Tuileries by the armed Parisians, or the «Second Revolution») and under the imminent threat of the Austrian and Prussian troops led by the Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, which were marching on Paris to «free» King Louis XVI (who had been arrested and suspended during the journée of August 10), and to restore the absolute monarchy.

During its first session held in the Salle du Manège (the indoor riding academy hall, seat of deliberations during most of the French Revolution since 1789) the September 21, 1792 (the day following the victory of the French troops at the battle of Valmy), the National Convention proclaimed the Abolition of Royalty. The next day, on September 22, 1792, it proclaimed the French First Republic by decree. Hence from this day, all public bills will be dated from « Year I » of the Republic.

Calès joined the political group of the « Mountain » (French: La Montagne, whose members sat on the highest benches of the Assembly), which was considered as the most radical group of the assembly and was led by personalities such as Georges Danton, Jean-Paul Marat and Maximilien de Robespierre. This group was notably opposing the group of the Girondist representatives.

Trials of King Louis XVI and Queen Marie-Antoinette

Opinion of the citizen Jean-Marie Calès, deputy of the department of Haute-Garonne, on the judgment of Louis XVI. Printed by order of the National Convention (1792)

When the Convention organised the Trial of King Louis XVI, held between the December 10 and 26, 1792, Calès published his « Opinion on the judgment of the king »,[14] and then voted on January 15, 1793 « yes »[15] to the immediate Death of the King, without suspension nor ratification by the people. He notably declared solemnly to the Assembly: I vote for death, and all my regret is not to have to pronounce on all the tyrants.[16] This vote of Calès will be later reported in « Ninety-Three », the last novel written by Victor Hugo:[17]

« People pointed out the corner where the seven representatives of the Haute-Garonne sat, elbow to elbow; the first called to pronounce their verdict on Louis XVI, they replied one after another: Mailhe: death. – Delmas: death. – Projean: death. – Calès: death. – Ayral: death. – Julien: death. – Desaby: death. »

Victor Hugo, « Ninety-Three » (1874)

The king will be sentenced to death by an extremely narrow majority: 365 votes against 356, and then, after recounting the votes the next day: 361 against 360. He will be guillotined a few days later, the January 21, 1793, on Revolution's Square.

Soon after (six months later), on August 5, 1793, Calès, then Representative on mission to the armies of the Ardennes (see below), will send a letter from the camp of Ivoy to the Convention to mark his adhesion to the decree which provided for the dismissal of Queen Marie-Antoinette before the Revolutionary Tribunal. He will speak in these terms:[18]

« Citizens my colleagues, you have decreed that Marie-Antoinette would be sent to the revolutionary tribunal and I was unfortunate enough to be absent when you issued this decree. I ask you to receive my adhesion as a proof of my horror for tyrants and of my contempt for the threats of those who defend their cause. »

On October 5, 1793, the Convention will vote this decree, on the 14th, the hearings of the revolutionary tribunal led by the public prosecutor Fouquier-Tinville will begin: the sentence of death, for high treason, will be pronounced on October 16, 1793. Only a few hours later, Marie Antoinette will be guillotined, like her husband, on Revolution's Square.

Following the King's death, the National Assembly left the Salle du Manège and moved on May 9, 1793, to the neighbouring Tuileries Royal Palace. It settled into the Salle des Machines (Hall of the Machines), which was larger, more comfortable and more adequate to the parliamentary sessions, and where the Assembly will carry out the main part of its works (until its final and definitive transfer into the current Palais Bourbon on January 21, 1798).

Project of Constitution

It was in the Salle des Machines of the Tuileries Royal Palace that the National Convention held the majority of its sessions from May 9, 1793, to January 21, 1798. Estampe by Jean Duplessis-Bertaux (between 1793 and 1803), Musée Carnavalet, Paris.

In the course of the same year, Calès was one of the fifty deputies who were commissioned to draft a project of constitution, concurrently with the one proposed by Condorcet the February 15 and 16, 1793 (Girondin constitutional project).[19] He published two liberal booklets entitled: « Notes on the plan of Constitution[20] » and « Continuation of the Notes[21] ». Although he was a deputy of the mountain, Calès criticized the plan of constitution proposed by the Committee of Public Safety which consecrated the Rousseauist democratism of popular sovereignty (direct democracy) to the detriment of the principle of national sovereignty (representative democracy) inspired by Montesquieu, and then by Sieyès in 1789.[22] Thus, the Committee's project, very democratic and decentralized, envisaged that the French people would be distributed, for the exercise of its sovereignty, in Primary Assemblies of cantons. The representative Calès recalled that « the people taken en masse, could not, in a large State, exercise by itself its right of legislation, nor handle the ship's wheel of the government » at the risk that « the whole of France would see its workshops, its agriculture and its trade abandoned, and the people would be continually assembled into deliberative assemblies ».[21] Thus, he advocated the organization of a « representative republic », which should not be « absolute ».[21]

Also, against the excesses of egalitarianism, he proposed a 'republic of merit', offering to establish four « degrees of honor » in the State: for the farmer, the warrior, the scholar and the artisan (« I would have liked these degrees of honor to be personal, and that the quality of being a French citizen made it the basis and the merit »[21]). He also opposed making the right to insurrection a law of the Republic (« It is in nature, and you have no need to erect it fastidiously and unnecessarily into a law »[21]). Finally, the liberal and tolerant Calès criticized several of the directive and uniformizing proposals of the Committee aimed at reinforcing the Unity of the social corps and of the nation:[21]

« Indeed, the self-interest, the self-esteem, the inclinations of both sexes towards each other, the religious sentiments, that we can change, modify, but not destroy, these motives of the human heart, have counted for nothing in the calculations of the Committee ».

The Convention solemnly promulgated the Constitution of the Year I on June 24, 1793 (constitution of the 6 messidor year I, the "convention montagnarde"). It was ratified by referendum on August 9, but was never implemented because of wartime. Indeed, two months later only, on October 10, 1793, the Convention decreed that its application was suspended indefinitely and « the government will be revolutionary until peace ».[23] The Convention adopted a few years later the Constitution of the Year III (August 22, 1795, which included in its preamble the Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man and the Citizen of 1795), which was approved by plebiscite on September 6, 1795, and founded the new regime of the Directory (it established also the Census suffrage, and politically, provided for a two-house legislature: a Council of Five Hundred and a Council of Ancients, and a unique kind of executive: a five-member committee (Directory) chosen by the legislature).

Project on Public education

In the context of the revolutionary great's idea of the regeneration of man, and of woman in particular, Calès also published a project on public education,[24] regarded as very progressive for the time,[25] because it was concerning women:[24]

« You will agree, Citizens, that all the projects which have been presented to you up to now are related only to a part of humanity, & that it seems that the most interesting class of society has not yet deserved to fix the attention of the legislator. Yes, always occupied with men, I never hear about women. »

These debates on the public school were at the time the opportunity for the conventionals to define the norms of the new femininity.[25] Within this project influenced by the ideas of Condorcet, Calès developed his innovative proposals for the establishment of public education houses « differing from the old convents »[24] in which no religion would be taught, for girls aged from eight to twelve or fifteen, « entrusted to citizens [women] known for their virtues, talents and love for the laws of the state ».[24] There, they will receive an education « based on the eternal laws of reason and truth »,[24] they will learn to read, write, speak French, count and hold a household. Not yet free, this education would nevertheless be moderate and financed on the basis of income, including a maximum beyond which the State will bear the additional expenses.

Similarly, in July 1793, to remedy to the illiteracy in the army, Calès proposed that military rank advancement should no longer be simply determined by seniority of service criteria, but rather conditioned on reading and writing proficiency. « It is urgent to remedy this abuse by demanding that the individual should meet the required qualities ».[26] A decree of 27 Pluviôse, Year II (February 12, 1794), will state later that no citizen may be promoted, from the rank of corporal to that of general-in-chief, if he can not read and write.

As representative of the Convention, Calès actively participated to the foundation of many famous current institutions as the National Museum of Natural History (June 10, 1793), the Ecole Polytechnique (September 28, 1794), the National Conservatory of Arts and Crafts (October 10, 1794), the Ecole Normale Supérieure (October 30, 1794), the Metric system, the Music Conservatory of Paris, the Conservateur des hypothèques and the Special School of Oriental Languages (March 30, 1795). The decree of March 19, 1793, also affirmed, together with the Right to work, the Right to assistance for every man who is unable to work (the public aid is a « sacred debt », Constitution of 1793). The law of Floreal, 22 Year II (May 11, 1794) organized the public assistance in the countryside.

Representative on mission

Représentant en mission (painting attributed to Jacques-Louis David)

On June 15, 1793, Calès was appointed Representative on mission, an extraordinary envoy of the National Assembly for maintaining law and order in the départements and armies. He was sent several times between 1793 and 1795,[27] notably in the Ardennes and the Marne (on June 17, 1793) to ensure the supply of military troops. During his mission, he delivered a resounding « Speech »[28] at the Champ de Mars of Sedan on August 10, 1793, which was printed and placarded in that city. This speech began with these exalted words:

« What a spectacle for the universe! What a day for a man worthy of being free! What a moment for a heart that has long groaned under the chains of an unworthy slavery, sighing for the delights of liberty. »

He met then in this city his future wife Madame Marie-Sylphide Anne Poupardin (1768–1828),[5] widow of the negociant Gabriel-Étienne Poupardin du Rivage d'Orléans. She belonged to a family of industrialists of Protestant origin, owned a manufacture in Sedan, which gave her a certain ease, and had two children. Calès married her in October 1793.

However, after four months of mission, on October 19, 1793, both Calès and his colleague Jean-Baptiste Perrin des Vosges were called back to Paris, because being considered as « too moderate ». In reality, this recall followed slanderous denunciations issued by members of the Popular Society of Sedan, as well as by the mayor of the city, Vassant, who accused them of having too much frequented the high society of Sedan (with as proof in support, the new wealthy wife of Calès).[29] However, the two representatives were defended by the deputies of the Ardennes and by the general-council of the commune of Charleville, who demanded to the Convention (in a eulogistic address read during the session of September 27, 1793) that « the infamous calumniators of these deputies should be delivered to the Revolutionary Tribunal ».[30] The accusations, thus, were not pursued. Calès and Perrin published then a « Report »[31] of this mission, made to the Convention and printed.

Thermidorian Convention

Robespierre overthrowed during a Session of the Convention nationale the 9 Thermidor Year II, painting by Max Adamo (1870), Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin.

After returning to the Assembly, Calès did not support any of the sanguinary proposals of the Convention during the Reign of Terror, and remained silent until the events of the 9 Thermidor Year II (July 27, 1794), which resulted in the fall of Robespierre and of the regime of Terror, thus opening the so-called period of the Thermidorian Convention. On the following 23 Thermidor (August 10, 1794) was appointed member of a commission comprising twelve representatives who were charged to unseal the « Papers of Robespierre, Couthon, Saint-Just, Lebas ... and other accomplices of the conspiracy, to examine them, and to make a report to the National Convention ».[32][33] Calès thus published on September 15, 1794, a « List of names and addresses of individuals convinced or accused to have taken part in the conspiracy of the infamous Robespierre »[34] which brought together 191 people from the entourage of Robespierre, who will all be later prosecuted. Because of his clear opposition to the « Incorruptible » and to the Reign of Terror, he received from the victorious party a new mission in the department of Côte d'Or on October 9, 1794.

In this mission, he developed much « prudence and firmness ».[35] He succeeded, not without difficulty, in putting an end to the revolutionary excesses committed by the "terrorists" (supporters of the regime of the Terror) and closed the club of Dijon (Terror is no longer on the agenda! he said[35]) which had asked the Convention on 7 Fructidor (August 24, 1794) for the return of rigorous measures, as before under the Terror. Calès freed about 300 incarcerated prisoners, and the political purge was led in the opposite direction.[35] All the local popular societies became prohibited and were dissolved.[36] Conversely, he attempted to prevent the return of the royalists and other fanatic Catholics, who took advantage of the liberalism of the thermidorian reaction to install in turn a violent reign of white terror, by threatening by decree[37] the nonjuring priests prêtres réfractaires », except married, sixty-year-old or invalid priests) that their bells would be broken, as well as their crosses and pedestals, and that the celebration of the cult would be forbidden.[38] The National Convention, after having heard the glowing reports of the Committee of Public Safety (made by Boissy d'Anglas) and of the Committee of General Security which were both approving the « firm and energetic » conduct of Calès in the Côte d'Or,[39][40] decreed the 5 nivôse year III (December 25, 1794) that he will go immediately to Besançon, in the department of Doubs.

Decree issued by the Representative Calès (Besançon, Doubs) the 25 nivôse year III (January 14, 1795).

Calès arrived in the Doubs at the beginning of the year 1795 to develop the local industry. He was authorized to take all measures necessary to promote the progress of the internationally renowned Watchmaking Manufacture of Besançon and to deliver it from the obstacles that were hindering its success.[41][42] He was similarly charged to maintain in activity in the departments of the Doubs and other surrounding departments, the forges and furnaces that feed the foundries of cannon, iron and weapons manufactures.[43] On 25 Nivôse Year III (January 14, 1795), Calès published a decree,[44] posted in all communes of the department, which encouraged Swiss watchmakers to settle in Besançon. This decree was extending that of 21 Brumaire Year II (November 11, 1793) which granted the right of citizenship, an exemption from military service and housing facilities to Swiss immigrants, who came to found the watchmaking industrial hub of the franc-comtoise capital, and the French Watchmaking Manufacture of Besançon (founded by decree on June 1, 1794). Thus, thanks to these significant incitements initiated by Calès and by the French public authorities, from only 80 Swiss watchmakers arrived in Besançon in 1793, their number will reach the 1500 at the end of the 1st Empire, Besançon becoming at the end of the 19th century, and still nowadays, the French capital of watchmaking.

In the Committee of General Security

Decree issued by the Representative Calès, member of the Committee of General Security, contersigned by Buonaparte (6 Messidor year III (June 24, 1795) in Paris).

Back in Paris, on Ventose, 15, year III (March 5, 1795), Calès was elected member of the Committee of General Security, a committee previously designed to protect the Revolutionary Republic from its internal enemies. He was re-elected a second time on August 2, 1795. During the historic session of the Assembly on 14 Vendemiaire (October 6, 1795), under the applause of his colleagues, Calès came to announce that he just had, at the head of the armed force, proceeded to the evacuation and closing of the hall[45] where the electors of the "section of the Théâtre-Français" (one of the revolutionary sections of Paris whose illustrious former members were Danton, Desmoulins and Marat) were meeting to protest against the decrees of the Convention and to organize the royalist insurrection of the 13th Vendémiaire year IV (October 5, 1795), which had started the day before.[46] This coup against the Convention and the young Republic will be repressed in blood by the commander of the troops of Paris Paul Barras and the young general Napoléon Bonaparte.

Calès remained in the Committee until the Directory, when it was replaced by a Ministry of General Police (January 2, 1796).

Under the Directory

The deputies of the Council of Five Hundred (in red costume), a year after Calès left it on May 20, 1798. (General Bonaparte at the Council of Five Hundred — Coup d'État of the 18–19 brumaire Year VIII, by François Bouchot)

Calès was elected[47] deputy of the Council of Five Hundred at the legislative elections of the 23rd Vendemiaire year IV (October 15, 1795), according to a procedure whereby two-thirds of the seats were reserved to former deputies of the Convention (by virtue of the « decree of the two-thirds » previously adopted, to prevent the royalists from returning to power). These principles were previously established by the Constitution of the Year III, which was adopted by the Convention on August 23, 1795, and which inaugurated the new regime of the Directory. The Convention held its last session on Brumaire 4, year IV (October 26, 1795) and closed with the prolonged cries of Long live the Republic![48] after having decreed an amnesty to all those punished for revolutionary crimes and pronounced the abolition of the death penalty from the day the general peace would be proclaimed.

The mandate of Calès was renewed on 20 Nivose year V (January 9, 1797). He took part, in a militarily besieged Paris, in the Coup of 18 Fructidor year V (September 5, 1797) led against the royalists who had become the majority in the Council of Five Hundred and the Council of Ancients, and actively contributed to the success of this day. The same day, the Chambers moved to the Odéon (Council of Five Hundred) and to the School of Medicine (Council of Ancients).[49]

The Orator's Tribune of the French National Assembly (in today's hemicycle of Palais Bourbon) and its bas-relief sculpted by François-Frédéric Lemot in 1798, were ordered by Calès, then deputy and quaestor of the Council of Five Hundred.

He also made several reports to the Council (which were adopted), on the costume of the representatives, of the secretaries, of the messengers of State and of the ushers of the Legislative Body,[50] on the establishment of health schools in Paris, Angers, Bruxelles and Montpellier[51] (12 Brumaire, Year VI – November 2, 1797), on medical education[52] (29 Germinal, Year VII – April 18, 1798), and on the organization of the Ecole Polytechnique[53] (he requested that only « young men known for their civic virtue » should be admitted).

Finally, Calès was chosen and appointed by his peers « quaestor » of the assembly (member of a parliamentary assembly in charge of its internal administration, such as budgeting, personnel, premises, equipment, etc.). The first major work under the responsibility of Calès was the construction of the first hemicycle of the Palais Bourbon, which has now disappeared. The names of « Talot, Jacomin, Martinel, Laa and Calès »[54] were engraved on a copper plate placed under the marble of the « orator's tribune » at the occasion of the installation of the Council of Five Hundred in its new palace on January 21, 1798. This tribune, whose bas-relief sculpted by François-Frédéric Lemot represents two allegories: « The History facing The Fame », still exists today and is still currently being used in today's French National Assembly.

Under the Empire and the Restoration

Residence of Jean-Marie Calès in les Bordes (Yvelines, France). Photography by Émile Mignon.

Calès retired from the parliament at the end of his mandate on May 20, 1798. He retired to his property, the château des Bordes, he had bought in 1796 as biens nationaux (properties confiscated during the French Revolution from the Catholic Church, the monarchy, émigrés, and suspected counter-revolutionaries for "the good of the nation"). This farm of a hundred hectares, which the descendants of the lord of Bonnelles owned under the Old Regime, is located in the commune of La Celle-les-Bordes, near Rambouillet and not far from Paris. He became mayor of the hamlet of les Bordes for a while, a breeder of purebred merinos[55] – a sheep species rare at this time – and he also resumed the practice of medicine. He lived at les Bordes during the last hours of the Directory, and throughout the Consulate and the Empire, for about 18 years.

However, after the fall of Napoleon, under the Bourbon Restoration of Monarchy, Calès was condemned to exile as regicide and banished from the national territory by the « amnesty law of January 12, 1816 » proclaimed by king Louis XVIII. He had to hastily leave France with a passport for Germany issued by the Minister of Police. He and his wife took with them only a few belongings, including one book: the works of Hippocrates (Van der Linden edition, Leiden, 1665), which Calès gave to the doctor who treated his last illness.[56]

After living in Munich (Germany) and in Basel (Switzerland), he took refuge in Liège (Belgium) with his wife and several other conventional regicides, including the former president of the Convention and deputy of Marne Thuriot de la Rozière, and the deputies of Ille-et-Vilaine Duval, of Lot-et-Garonne Paganel, of Haute-Garonne Mailhe, of Indre-et-Loire Ysabeau and of Oise Matthieu-Miranpal. He was helped for his settlement in the Belgian city by a certain police commissioner Wassin, who at first took him for his younger brother (the Colonel of Napoleon's Grande Armée, Jean-Chrysostôme Calès) with whom he had served.[57] There, to survive, he continued practicing medicine, as well as other activities, such as works on the agricultural economy,[58][59] as he mentioned himself in a revelatory letter addressed to one of his nephews Godefroy Calès (and to his five-year-old grand-nephew, Jean Jules Godefroy Calès, both future Republican representatives in 1848 and 1885), which gives an interesting piece of information about his new life in the Belgian city. He also demonstrates in this letter that, until the twilight of his life, he kept a constant execration of the nobility:[57]

« These nobles have no nobility and, as long as this caste will exist, it will be the misfortune of France. I do not wish it to be annihilated, but I would have it put into the inability to harm. »

Shortly after his arrival at Liège, the Bourbons, answering to the solicitations of a friend to whom Calès had saved the life during the Terror, consented to let him return to France, but Calès refused, alleging that being exiled by a law, he could only come back by a law.[59] After the Revolution of July 1830, he did not wish to take advantage of the abrogation of the amnesty law promulgated by the Monarchy of July, and thus he never returned to France.

Calès died, six years after his wife, in Liège on April 13, 1834, at the age of 76, and after 18 years of exile.

Genealogy

Jean-Marie Calès is:

Bibliography

  • Roger Caratini, Dictionnaire des personnages de la Révolution, Ed. Le pré aux Clercs, 1988, 580 p. (ISBN 2-7144-2232-2)
  • « Jean-Marie Calès », in Robert et Cougny, Dictionnaire des parlementaires français, 1889
  • « Jean-Marie Calès » in Joseph François Michaud et Louis Gabriel Michaud, « Biographie universelle, ancienne et moderne, ou Histoire, par ordre alphabétique, de la vie publique et privée de tous les hommes qui se sont fait remarquer par leurs écrits, leurs actions, leurs talents, leurs vertus ou leurs crimes » (Volume 59, pp. 556–557), Michaud frères, 1835.
  • « Jean-Marie Calès » in « La Grande Encyclopédie – The great encyclopedia: reasoned inventory of sciences, letters and arts » (Volume 8, p. 911), by a society of scholars and literary people; under the dir. of MM. Marcellin Berthelot,...Ferdinand-Camille Dreyfus et al. Publisher: H. Lamirault (Paris) then Société anonyme of "La Grande encyclopédie" (Paris) (1885–1902) Contributor: Dreyfus, Camille (1851–1905). Identifier: ark:/12148/bpt6k246438. Source: National Library of France. Available in French on the website of Gallica.fr: http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k246438.image.langFR.f3.pagination
  • « Jean-Marie Calès » in the « Galerie historique des contemporains, ou Nouvelle biographie » (Historic gallery of the contemporaries, or New biography), Volume 3, by Pierre Louis Pascal Jullian, Gerrit Van Lennep, Philippe Lesbroussart., editions Aug. Wahlen & Co (1818).
  • Biography of Jean-Marie Calès on the website of the French National Assembly: http://www2.assemblee-nationale.fr/sycomore/fiche/(num_dept)/12960
  • « Le Conventionnel Jean-Marie Calés (1757–1834): du Lauragais à Liège. » by Pierre Arches, Actes des 115e et 116e Congrès nationaux des Soc. savantes, Avignon, 1990 et Chambéry, 1991, Section d'H. moderne et cont., T. II, (1992), pp. 225–232.
  • « Compendium of Acts of the Committee of Public Safety with the official correspondence of the representatives on mission and the register of the provisional executive council » published by François-Alphonse Aulard (Scientific editor), Chapter "Representatives on mission", Volume 19th, Imprimerie Nationale (National Library of France), Paris, 1909. Public domain. Identifier: ark:/12148/bpt6k62213544. Available in French on the website of Gallica.fr: http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k62213544

References

  1. Biography of Jean-Marie Calès on the Website of the French National Assembly: http://www2.assemblee-nationale.fr/sycomore/fiche/(num_dept)/12960
  2. See below his letter to his nephew sent in 1733 from exile in Liège, only one year before his death.
  3. « Le Conventionnel Jean-Marie Calès (1757–1834): du Lauragais à Liège. » by Pierre Arches, Actes des 115e et 116e Congrès nationaux des Soc. savantes, Avignon, 1990 et Chambéry, 1991, Section d'H. moderne et cont., T. II, (1992), pp. 225–232.
  4. Mrs. Edgar Quinet will write later: « This is a family adored in the country, and respected by opponents: since 89, leaders of the Lauragais democracy from father to son. From the conventional (Jean-Marie Calès), to the representative of the Constituent (Godefroy Calès), all Republicans, men of heart. Jules Calès, our friend, is the worthy son of a worthy father. » Hermione Quinet (Edgar Quinet), in "Sentiers de France", (1875), Paris, E. Dentu, IV, p. 278. (OCLC 43636922, read online (in French): https://books.google.com/books?id=SrXyswEACAAJ&pg=PA278)
  5. A reproduction of the portrait of Madame Calès surrounded by her plants, a botanical book by Carl von Linné and a small representation of Jean-Marie Calès, Oil – 1m92 x 1m30), can be observed page 44 of « Le Musée d'Orléans » (1922), Vitry, Paul, 1872–1941, Musée des beaux-arts d'Orléans, available online on the site of Archive.org: https://archive.org/stream/lemuseedorleans00vitr#page/44/mode/1up
  6. Archives Départementales des Ardennes, Sedan, Collection communale (GG173) – Table annuelle des baptêmes (1762–1793) – Année 1769 (page 21). Weblink: https://archives.cd08.fr/arkotheque/consult_fonds/fonds_seriel_resu_rech.php?ref_fonds=4%5B%5D
  7. The Calès siblings consisted of: 1) Jean-Marie (16/10/1757-Cessales; † 13/04/1834-Liège), Physician and Deputy. Without descendants. 2) Jean (08/11/1764-Caraman; † 11/10/1840-Mazamet), Physician and Inspector General of Military Hospitals, married to Marianne Louise Victorine Fournier (?; † 09/02/1744-Villefranche). Father of Godefroy Calès (1799–1868) and Louis Denis Godefroy Calès (1800–?) 3) Jean-Louis, known as Figeac (19/12/1766-?; † 14/01/1850-Cessales), Physician, married (in 1839, at 73 years old) to Paule Bonnet (16/05/1783-Renneville, †?). Without descendants. 4) Jean-Chrysostôme (27/01/1769-Caraman; † 21/08/1853-Cessales), Colonel and Baron of the Empire. Without descendants. 5) Jean Joseph Etienne Victorin (26/04/1772-?; † 16/06/1853-Cessales), Military Officer. Without descendants. 6) Jean Joseph 7) Etienne, known as Petit (21/08/1773-?; † 22/01/1855-Cessales), Unmarried, without profession. Without descendants. 8) Jean 9) Marie Etiennette (? -Caraman; † 08/01/1849-Villefranche), married to Jean-Paul Pujol, Notary in Villefranche († 01/02/1840-Villefranche). Mother of Constantine Pujol († 1861) and Marie Justine Pujol (1796–1894). 10) Marie Justine (? -Toulouse; † 05/09/1873-Villefranche), married to Constantin Pujol († 10/06/1844-Villefranche). Without descendants.
  8. « Le Conventionnel Jean-Marie Calés (1757–1834): du Lauragais à Liège. » by Pierre Arches, Actes des 115e et 116e Congrès nationaux des Soc. savantes, Avignon, 1990 et Chambéry, 1991, Section d'H. moderne et cont., T. II, (1992), pp. 225–232. In French.
  9. Departmental Archives of Haute-Garonne, L 4157, meeting of October 27, 1791. in Pierre Arches (1992), cit. op.
  10. Departmental Archives of Haute-Garonne, L 4157 and 1 L 551, p. 15. in Pierre Arches (1992), cit. op.
  11. Departmental Archives of Haute-Garonne, 2 E 686. in Pierre Arches (1992), cit. op.
  12. elected with 348 votes over 690.
  13. The results of this election: in J. Godechot « La Révolution française dans le Midi toulousain », Toulouse, 1986, p. 160-163 ; in Pierre Arches (1992), Cit. op.
  14. See « Opinion du citoyen Jean-Marie Calès, député du département de la Haute-Garonne, sur le jugement de Louis XVI. Imprimée par ordre de la Convention Nationale » (1792). In French.
  15. Details of the vote of the Citizen Jean-Marie Calès available on the french Wikipédia page: Votes sur la mort de Louis XVI. Answers: 1° "YES" to « Is Louis Capet guilty of conspiracy against public liberty and guilty of attacks against the general security of the State, yes or no? » 2° "NO" to « Will the judgment of the National Convention against Louis Capet be submitted to People's ratification, yes or no? » 3° "DEATH" to « What punishment will be inflicted on Louis ? » 4° "NO" to « Will there be a stay to the execution of the judgment of Louis Capet ? »
  16. at the 3rd roll call, to the question: "What punishment will be inflicted on Louis?" "
  17. in « Ninety-Three », Part IInd: in Paris, Book 3rd: the Convention, Chapter VII, Victor Hugo (1874), Editions Michel Lévy frères. Full text english transcription available on Wikisource: https://en.m.wikisource.org/wiki/Ninety-three/2.3.1
  18. « J.-M. Calès, to the Convention, From the camp of Ivoy, August 5, 1793, Year II of the Republic. » « Citizens my colleagues, you have decreed that Marie-Antoinette would be sent to the Revolutionary Tribunal and I was unfortunate enough to be absent when you issued this decree. I ask you to receive my adhesion as a proof of my horror for tyrants and of my contempt for the threats of those who defend their cause. Signed: Calès, Representative of the people at the army of the Ardennes. PS: I ask the Convention to read to the public my adhesion and to record it in the minutes. » in Parliamentary Archives, Volume 70: From July 30 to August 9, 1793, Session of Thursday, August 8, 1793, in the morning, page 508. Available in French on the website of Stanford University: https://frda.stanford.edu/fr/catalog/xm282fx2304_00_0514%5B%5D
  19. Nicolas de Caritat. "Plan de Constitution présenté à la Convention nationale les 15 et 16 février 1793, l'an II de la République (Constitution girondine)", in Digithèque de matériaux juridiques et politiques by Jean-Pierre Maury, retrieved November 4, 2008
  20. See the « Notes de Jean-Marie Calès, député de la Haute-Garonne, sur le plan de constitution présenté par le Comité. Imprimées par ordre de la Convention Nationale » (1793)
  21. See the « Suite des Notes de Jean-Marie Calès, député de la Haute-Garonne, sur le plan de constitution présenté par le Comité. Imprimées par ordre de la Convention Nationale » (1793)
  22. « Les Gauches françaises 1762–2012, Histoire et politique », Jacques Julliard, Champs histoire, Flammarion (2012).
  23. Kennedy, M. L. "The Jacobin Clubs in the French Revolution: 1793–1795," p.53. Berghahn Books, New York: 2000.
  24. See « De l'éducation nationale, par Jean-Marie Calès, deputé de Haute-Garonne. Imprimé par la Convention Nationale »
  25. See « L’instruction en France pendant la Révolution. Discours et rapports de Mirabeau, Talleyrand-Périgord, Condorcet, Lanthenas, Romme, Le Peletier, Calès, Lakanal, Daunou et Fourcroy », Paris, Didier et Cie libraires-éditeurs, 1881, p. 399.
  26. It was especially the mode of advancement which raised, as elsewhere, the strongest complaints. According to the most general interpretation of the law of February 21–25, 1793, which reserved one third of the vacant places « for seniority of service with equal rank, » an old soldier could, in less than three weeks, advance from corporal to brigade commander. « It has been wished, wrote the representative Calès, that one should advance to the same rank by seniority of service; but often the oldest is an illiterate man who will occupy a position for which he can not fulfill the functions, and soon, not one of your officers will neither read nor write. It is urgent to remedy this abuse by demanding that the individual should meet the required qualities. » in « Les Volontaires 1791–1794» (The Volunteers 1791–1794), by Camille Rousset, editions Perrin et Cie, Paris (1892), Chapter XXVII "Sentiments de l’Armée du Nord après le départ de Custine" (Sentiments of the Army of the North after the departure of Custine), page 223. Read online on the website of Archive.org: https://archive.org/details/lesvolontairesi00rousgoog
  27. 1/ To the army of the Ardennes, with Massieu and Perrin, by the decree of June 17, 1793, to replace Deville, Hentz, Laporte and Milhaud (IV-589). Mission confirmed by the decree of July 19, 1793 (V-300-302). Recall by the decree of October 19, 1793, which appoints to their place Bo, Coupé and Hentz (VII-502). He still writes from Sedan on Brumaire 2, Year II (October 23, 1793) (VII-588-589). 2/ In the department of Côte-d'Or, by the decree of Vendemiaire 18, Year III (October 9, 1794), to purge the authorities (XVII-328). He received from the Committee of Inspectors of the Chamber 6,000 pounds for mission expenses on Vendemiaire 19, Year III (October 10, 1794) (AN, D * XXXVc 8). He still writes on Frimaire 8, Year III (November 28, 1794) (without place) (XVIII-414). 3/ In Besançon (Doubs) and neighboring departments, by the decree of Nivose 5, Year III (December 25, 1794), to develop industry (XIX-88). He writes on Nivose 8, Year III (December 28, 1794) that his mission in Côte-d'Or will end on Nivose 20 (XIX-145), then he writes on Nivose 12, Year III (January 1, 1, 1795) to announce that he received the decree of the 5th and will go to Besancon (XIX-221-222). He writes from Besancon on Pluviose 1st, Year III (January 20, 1795) (XIX-591-592). From: Missionnaires de la République (annexes) : tableau des représentants en mission département par département et tableau des représentants en mission auprès des différentes armées de la République / Cartes des missions (Réalisation : Corédoc ©) / Michel Biard, GRHis – Normandie Université [archive]
  28. See the « Discours du citoyen Calès, représentant du peuple à Varmée des Ardennes, prononcé au Champ-de-Mars de Sedan, le 10 août 1793 »
  29. See « J.-Marie Calès, député de la Haute-Garonne, à ses collègues, sur les calomnies que quatre à cinq intriguans répandent contre lui, au nom d'une société populaire ». Paris : impr. de Guérin, (s. d.). Notice n° : FRBNF30186512 http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb301865121
  30. in « Procès-Verbal De La Convention Nationale, imprimé par son ordre, contenant les séances depuis & compris le 16 septembre l'an premier (1792) de la République Française, une & indivisible, jusques & compris le 30 du même mois, de l'an deuxième (1793) ». Volume 21. Imprimerie Nationale (1793). page 265. Read online: https://books.google.com/books?id=sck2hQNa6p4C
  31. See the « Rapport fait par les citoyens Calès et Perrin, représentans envoyés, par la Convention nationale, près l'armée des Ardennes. Imprimé par ordre de la Convention Nationale » (1793)
  32. Le Moniteur, 24 Thermidor, An II., no. 324, vol. X., p. I323
  33. « Rapport fait au nom de la commission chargée de l'examen des papiers trouvés chez Robespierre et ses complices » by E. B. Courtois, deputy of the department of Aube, In the session of 16 Nivôse Year III (January 5, 1795) of the French Republic, one and indivisible. Printed by order of the National Convention. Public domain. Available on the website of Archive.org : https://archive.org/details/rapportfaitaunom00cour
  34. See the « List of names and addresses of individuals convicted or warned to have taken part in the conspiracy of the infamous Robespierre » signed by Guffroy (president of the commission), Espert, Courtois and Calés, 29 Fructidor, Year II. From the Imprimerie de la rue de Chartres, No 68. Available on Archive.org: https://archive.org/details/listedesnomsetdo00unse
  35. in « Histoire du Département de la Côte d'Or », Jean-François Bazin, éditions Jean-Paul Gisserot (2004 – 125 pages).
  36. « Calès, the representative, had the greatest difficulty in dissolving this coalition; he dismissed all the revolutionary authorities, selected twenty or thirty of the most moderate members of the club, and committed to them the task of its purification. » in « The history of the French revolution » by Marie Joseph L. Adolphe Thiers, tr. with notes by F. Shoberl (1838), Chapter: The National Convention, p54. (In English: https://books.google.com/books?id=c2kEAAAAQAAJ)
  37. Order of the Representative Calès, on 26 Frimaire Year III (December 16, 1794): « 1° Upon receipt of this order, the national agents will bring down and break in their respective districts all the bells without exception that are still in the various municipalities and send them debris to whom by right. — 2° Municipalities with a population of three thousand souls may keep a bell; those where there are several sections, one per section. — 3°. Anyone who objects to the provisions of Article 1 shall immediately be arrested and imprisoned as a suspect. — 4°. The said national agents will be given back all the sacred vessels, sacerdotal vestments which might still be in the communes, and will arrest, as suspects, any inhabitant who, being in possession of such items, would not voluntarily deliver them back. — 5°. The keys of the churches in communes under three thousand souls will be brought and given to the national agents of the districts, who will not be allowed to relinquish them under any pretext; Anyone who would try to open the said churches, or to enter through the windows, under any pretext whatsoever, without having obtained the approval of the district directory, will be arrested and detained as a suspect. — 6°. Every priest residing in the department of Côte-d'Or shall be bound, immediately after the publication of the present decree, to send to the district's directory his name, his age, and the place of his residence; he will designate the parish where he has served, the present place of his residence, and the distance from one to the other; he will also indicate the place of his birth, his means of subsistence and the times of his oaths. — 7°. The directory of the district shall have any priest removed to ten land leagues from the parish where he has exercised its functions, who is not at that distance; he will enjoin those who are not of the department to retire, within a period of a decade, to the place of their birth; it will have them road maps delivered in this respect. — 8°. Is excepted for the provisions of Article 7, any priest who would be married and would be obviously engaged in commerce or agriculture, as well as the sixty-year-olds and the infirm, who shall be placed under the surveillance of the municipalities, who shall answer for their actions. — 9°. The national agents of the districts will carry out a formal inquiry against any priest, regent of communes, who will have celebrated the offices in some commune, will lock up the first ones in the chief-places of the department (sic), and, after having dismissed the seconds of their functions, they will refer to the representative of the people. — 10°. The crosses that would have been lifted up, or that would still exist in any place, will be immediately broken and their pedestals overthrown, under penalty of 150 pounds of fine for each municipal officer who would allow them to exist in their respective communes. This Order is dated 26 Frimaire Year III. » in the « Compendium of Acts of the Committee of Public Safety with the official correspondence of the representatives on mission and the register of the provisional executive council » published by F-A. Aulard, page 20, Chapter "Representatives on mission", Volume 19th, Imprimerie Nationale (National Library), Paris, 1909. In French.
  38. ON THE NAME of the French People. Decree of the representative of the people J.-Marie Calés ordering that the bells will be broken, the churches closed and the crosses broken, on Frimaire 26, Year III (December 16, 1794). Imp. Causse, placard.
  39. The Committee of General Security replied by the following act: « The Committee of General Security to Calès, Representative in Côte-d'Or. Paris, 5 Nivôse, Year III – December 25, 1794. The Committee received your decree of the 26th of last Frimaire concerning the measures you thought necessary to take to repress fanaticism and to defeat the monster which drags after it all the horrors of discord and civil war; He approves your firm and energetic conduct, and warns you that very soon decadary feasts will be instituted, which will entertain and amuse the people by instructing them of their obligations to the country and to its fellow citizens. Signed: Lomont, Reubell. » in the « Compendium of Acts of the Committee of Public Safety with the official correspondence of the representatives on mission and the register of the provisional executive council » published by F-A. Aulard, page 90, Chapter "Representatives on mission", Volume 19th, Imprimerie Nationale (National Library), Paris, 1909. In French.
  40. « THE REPRESENTATIVE IN THE CÔTE-D'OR TO THE NATIONAL CONVENTION. Without place, 8 nivôse year III – December 28, 1794. Colleagues, My mission in the department of Côte-d'Or will finish the 20th of the current; I will leave on the 21st to go to the heart of the Convention. I will leave to my successor the quiet department, the authorities consisting of capable, human and well-meaning patriots. His presence alone will suffice to contain the intriguers who, similar in all to the ancient aristocrats, say that the counter-revolution is made, because they are no longer in possession of plunder and murder, and flatter themselves that the reign of the justice can not hold, because the joy and union of the people seem to them insults to liberty. However, good citizens know that the French people and the Convention will no longer allow assassins to hold the reins of government, and this attitude strengthens their courage. Signed: Calès. » in the « Compendium of Acts of the Committee of Public Safety with the official correspondence of the representatives on mission and the register of the provisional executive council » published by F-A. Aulard, page 145, Chapter "Representatives on mission", Volume 19th, Imprimerie Nationale (National Library), Paris, 1909. In French.
  41. « Proclamation of the representative of the people Jean-Marie Calès, delegated by the National Convention in the department of Doubs, to protect the establishment of the watchmaking factory, citizens of Besançon, Besançon, Year III »
  42. Calès tried to convinced the citizens of Besançon that developing the horological manufacture will be profitable to this mountainous region of « sterile rocks ». Horology was an art which could be practiced by all, « including females » and both old and young. He argued that « we can no longer make our children into [...] priests, monks or financiers [...] It is necessary to give them as an inheritance an interesting and useful art; and this is horology ». in « La Vedette du département du Doubs», 3 prairial Year II (May 22, 1794) in French. See also: « Time and the French Revolution: The Republican Calendar, 1789-year XIV » by Matthew Shaw, Editions: Royal Historical Society (July 21, 2011). in English.
  43. « EXTENSION OF THE MISSION OF CALES IN Besançon, IN Doubs AND SURROUNDING DEPARTMENTS. National Convention, meeting of 5th Nivose, year III. – December 25, 1794. The National Convention, after hearing the report of its Committee of Public Safety [The report was made by Boissy d'Anglas. A.N.], decrees: 1°. The representative of the people Calès, currently on a mission in the department of Côte-d'Or, will go immediately to Besançon to take all the measures necessary to promote the progress of the watchmaking factory and to deliver it from the obstacles that hinder its success. 2°. He will be invested with all the powers given to the representatives of the people in the departments. 3°. He will report his operations to the Committee of Public Safety, and inform the Committee of Agriculture and Arts. – 4° He is also responsible for maintaining in activity in the departments of Doubs and other surrounding, the forges and furnaces that feed the foundries of cannon, iron and weapons factories. – 5° The report will be printed and distributed. » in the « Compendium of Acts of the Committee of Public Safety with the official correspondence of the representatives on mission and the register of the provisional executive council » published by F-A. Aulard, page 88, Chapter "Representatives on mission", Volume 19th, Imprimerie Nationale (National Library), Paris, 1909. In French.
  44. « The representative of the people J.- Marie Calès in the department of Doubs and other surrounding departments: Considering that the way to give a new activity to the establishment of watchmaking in Besançon, is to constitute the advantages already made to the Foreign artists who went there before the first Brumaire [October 22, 1794], to those who, since this term, delayed by family or interest affairs, have arrived in Besançon, & wanting to facilitate to other artists the means to settle there, without harming their affairs, by prolonging the term which was fixed to them: Decrees that the indemnity & the transport expenses granted, by the decree of the Representative of the people Bassal, confirmed by the Committee of Public Safety, to foreign watchmaking artists who settled in Besançon, until the passed first Brumaire [October 22, 1794], will be paid to those who have come since that term, & will continue to be paid to other foreigner artists who will settle in Besançon, to work in watchmaking, until the next first Vendémiaire, (old style: 18 [sic, 23] September 1795). The payment of these allowances & transportation costs, will be made in the same mode as that determined by the decree of the representative of the people, mentioned above. The Representative of the people also decides that the present will be sent to the administration of the Department of the Doubs, to be printed, posted, everywhere it will be needed & to be sent to the number of five hundred copies in-4 ° in the watchmaking workshops of Besançon, as soon as possible. The Representative of the people. Signed CALES. » in the Departmental Archives of the Doubs, L 52/2.
  45. CALES: « The gentlemen of the section of the Théâtre-Français have abandoned their posts. The closing of the section has been decided; here is the bell we send you. (Applause.) » (page 136). His decisions will be reproached to him later by his colleague from the Committee of general Security and General of brigade Rovère (Montagnard and then Royalist deputy): « This one [Calès] had complained with warmth about the audacity of these young people [the seditious of the 13 Vendémiaire]. Rovère told him the next day: What did you do Calès? do you know that you fired on my grenadiers? » (page 223). Rovère will be arrested, 10 days later, as one of the promoters of the insurrection. in Réimpression de l'Ancien Moniteur (Reprint of the Old Monitor), Volume 26 (1842). Read online: https://books.google.com/books?id=2rM9AAAAYAAJ
  46. in « Jean-Marie Calès » in the « Galerie historique des contemporains, ou Nouvelle biographie » (Historic gallery of the contemporaries, or New biography), Volume 3, by Pierre Louis Pascal Jullian, Gerrit Van Lennep, Philippe Lesbroussart., editions Aug. Wahlen & Co (1818). In French.
  47. with 200 votes
  48. in « The history of the French revolution » by Marie Joseph L. Adolphe Thiers, tr. with notes by F. Shoberl (1838), Chapter: The National Convention, p293. (In English: https://books.google.com/books?id=c2kEAAAAQAAJ)
  49. in « Biographie universelle, ancienne et moderne, ou Histoire, par ordre alphabétique, de la vie publique et privée de tous les hommes qui se sont fait remarquer par leurs écrits, leurs actions, leurs talents, leurs vertus ou leurs crimes » (Volume 59, pp. 556–557), Joseph François Michaud et Louis Gabriel Michaud, 1835.
  50. See the « Motion d'ordre par Calès sur le costume des représentants du peuple. Séance du 27 fructidor an V ». Corps législatif. Conseil des Cinq-Cents. Impr. nationale, an V. Notice n° : FRBNF30186519 http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb30186519f
  51. See the « Rapport fait par J.-M. Calès,... au nom de la Commission d'instruction publique, sur les écoles spéciales de santé. Séance du 12 prairial an V ». Corps législatif. Conseil des Cinq-Cents. Paris : Impr. nationale, an V. Notice n° : FRBNF30186518 http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb301865183
  52. See the « Opinion de J.-M. Calès sur les écoles de médecine. Séance du 17 germinal an VI ». Corps législatif. Conseil des Cinq-Cents. Paris : Impr. nationale, an VI. Notice n° : FRBNF30186522 http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb30186522b
  53. See the « Discours de Calès sur l'École polytechnique. Séance du 24 nivôse an VI » Corps législatif. Conseil des Cinq-Cents. Paris : Impr. nationale, an VI. Notice n° : FRBNF30186520 http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb30186520n
  54. When the Palais Bourbon, owned by the Condé, assembled in the domain of the State in 1790, was, by virtue of a decree of the second day, Year III, allocated to the meetings of the Council of Five Hundred, the name of the president F. VILLERS was engraved on the octagonal silver medal which the architects Gisors and Lecomte placed under the marble of the tribune of the orators with other objects, in particular with a copper plate bearing: « The Council of Five Hundred in its second session, on Brumaire 26, Year VI of the French Republic, had this inscription engraved under the presidency of the Citizen Villers and under the leadership of the Citizens of the Commission of Inspectors Talot, Jacomin, Martinel, Laa and Calès, to celebrate the making of this building. » (See the note on François Toussaint VILLERS on the website of the National Assembly)
  55. « In the hamlet of les Bordes, is another old castle, belonging to Mr. Calès, mayor of the place. The soil is in arable land, meadows and woods. Mr. Calès and the farmer of a farm known as Champ-Houdry, maintain each a herd of merinos, of pure race; that of the farmer is very large » in « Dictionnaire topographique des Environs de Paris, jusqu'à 20 Lieues à la ronde de cette Capitale », by Charles Oudiette, (1817), Paris. Chapter: "Celle-les-Bordes (la)", pages 120–121. Read online on the website of Archive.org: https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_PKFiJMkPwp8C
  56. F. Bidlot (from Liège) in « The medical chronicle, journal of scientific, literary and anecdotal medicine » (1903), Chapter « A conventional doctor: J.-M. Calès », page 346. Available in French online on the website Archive.org: https://archive.org/details/lachroniquemdic01unkngoog
  57. The extract from the following letter (sent from Liège on October 21, 1833 addressed by Calès to one of his nephews, Godefroy Calès, then also doctor in Villefranche-de-Lauragais, and future Republican representative in 1848) gives an interesting piece of information about the life he lived in Liège. One can see that the former member of the Convention had not, like so many of his colleagues, repudiated his democratic principles. « To Monsieur Calès, doctor of medicine, in Villefranche-de-Lauragais, through Toulouse, France. My dear friend. Your letter, full of wit and sparkling with gaiety, gives me the greatest pleasure; you remind me of the mischievousnesses of my youth, of which I do not repent; they made me laugh before, why should they make me cry now? I shall never forget that they made me bear without difficulty the misery, which continually heaped on me, that they have softened the bitterness which the exercise of medicine entails with it, a divine art in itself, yet detestable for him who exercises it. The uneducated public, the ignorant confreres, jealous and envious, give a thousand disgusts to the educated practitioner; I know that we can gain by it over all of that; but we feel some anguish, which we bear with difficulty. You tell me that a nobleman has vexed you because you were my parents: that does not astonish me from him; it is a caste so low, so ill-educated, that one can expect of it only the fruits of ignorance and prejudice. I am sure that the idiot who vexed you, if he lost his place, is as flat today as he was arrogant then. I have seen nobles of another flock, such as the Bethune-Sully, the Lagrange, the Nivernais, the Rohan, honoring themselves to be as sentinels at my door, and lavishing upon me the testimonies of the most adulatory sentiments, down to baseness. I’m citing this to prove you that these nobles have no nobility and, as long as this caste will exist, it will be the misfortune of France. I do not wish it to be annihilated, but I would have it put into the inability to harm. Here is my position in Liège. After living in Munich and Basel, in Switzerland, I came to Liège fifteen years ago. The police commissioner Wassin confused me with my brother Chrysostôme [Jean-Chrysostôme Calès, A.N.], with whom he had served, and proposed me to remain at Liège. The plan of the Bourbons was to push us until Siberia, and a safe asylum was, then, a treasure. I found it here. I first occupied myself to make theses for the candidates in medicine, which produced me twelve hundred francs a year. Soon after, a few cures, which made a certain noise, attracted to me a prodigious number of patients, but because I was not a Belgian doctor, I decided to give consultations at my house and I refused to go to see the patients, excepted only if I would be called in consultation by doctors, what happens sometimes. There are no important people who had not come to me yet, and the public has followed their example, which has given me some consideration. As I helped and pleased a lot of people, everyone tries to help me. Everything I do is free; a sober life puts me above any need and with a small income I look like a rich man. Embrace for me my sisters. The eldest [Marie-Étiennette Pujol, born Calès, A.N.] first had the courage to write to me before the end of my exile. I am grateful to her. Justine [Marie-Justine Pujol, born Calès, A.N.], whom I left as a child, always had my friendship. I thank you for giving me news of her. [...] All yours. Calès. A thousand greetings to your wife [Léonie-Alphonsine-Zulmée Calès, born Metgé, A.N.], of which you do not speak and to your little boy [Jean-Jules-Godefroy Calès, born in 1828, then 5 years-old in 1833. A.N.]. » (in « La Révolution Française », Historical review directed by Auguste Dide, Tome X, January–June 1886, Paris, Charavray frères, editors. Available (in French) on the site of Archive.org, p740-743: https://archive.org/details/larvolutionfra10sociuoft)
  58. He was practicing other activities, particularly in agronomy (his 44-page memoir on the breeding and treatment of merinos was awarded by the Liège Emulation Society on April 25, 1821, Pierre Arches in « Le Conventionnel Jean-Marie Calès (1757–1834): du Lauragais à Liège. » Actes des 115e et 116e Congrès nationaux des Soc. savantes, Avignon, 1990 et Chambéry, 1991, Section d'H. moderne et cont., T. II, (1992), pp. 225–232.) or in building He lived Place Saint-Lambert, where he built the block of houses which join the Société Militaire, the rue de Bex and the rue Royale » in F. Bidlot (from Liège) « The medical chronicle, journal of scientific, literary and anecdotal medicine » (1903), Chapter « A conventional doctor: J.-M. Calès », page 346. )
  59. « After the Hundred Days, exiled like all the regicides, he first traversed Germany and Switzerland, and afterwards settled in Liège. The Bourbons, shortly after, answering to the solicitations of a friend to whom Calès had saved the life during the Terror, consented to let him return to France, but Calès refused, alleging that being exiled by a law, he could only come back by a law. Calès was a scholar, and did not cease, at Liege, to occupy himself with various works of great interest for the agriculture. The Society of Emulation of this city awarded him the prize, in its session of the April 21, 1821, for his Memoir on the question proposed by this society: Which are the obstacles that have hindered in our climates the propagation of merinos? What are the means to overcome them and to breed these animals and the cross-breeds that come out from them? (See the minutes of this meeting). He provided the Journal of Agriculture of the Kingdom of the Netherlands with several articles on rural economy. Dr. Calès ended his career in Liège, in February 1835 [sic], at the age of more than 70 years, leaving a little fortune, fruit of 20 years of work. His loss was deeply felt in his adopted country. » in « Biographie Liégeoise, précis historique et chronologique de toutes les personnes qui se sont rendues célèbres par leurs talens, leurs vertus ou leurs actions, dans l’ancien diocèse et pays de Liège, les duchés de Limbourg et de Bouillon, le pays de Stavelot et la ville de Maestricht ; depuis les temps les plus reculés jusqu’à nos jours. » – Bibliographie Liégeoise – By Comte Antoine Gabriel de Becdelièvre. Publisher: Imprimerie de Jeunehomme Frères, Derrière-le-Palais, nº 334 – (1837)
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