Claude-Jean-François Despréaux

Claude-Jean-François Despréaux was a French musician and revolutionary, born in the 1740s and died in Paris on 11 August 1794.

Biography

The son of Jean-François Despréaux, oboist of the Académie royale de musique who retired in 1767, and Marie-Anne d'Arras, Louis-Félix's older brother (1746-1813) and Jean-Étienne Despréaux, Despréaux made his debut in 1759 as violinist. After he became head of the concertmasters in 1771, he retired in 1782.[1][2]

A pensioner of the Republic, he was a civil commissioner and a member of the popular society of the section de Brutus, and juror at the Revolutionary Tribunal in 1793.[3][1][2][4]

Desperate following the Fall of Maximilien Robespierre, he committed suicide with a shotgun in his apartment, at 20 rue du Sentier, on 24 thermidor an II (11 August 1794).[1][2][4][5]

He is the author of several sonatas for violin and harpsichord.[2]

gollark: You have to have ones which are better at producing good outcomes even if there is abuse.
gollark: You can't stop people from misusing systems. The entire point of courts and such is that people don't act in good faith all the time.
gollark: Not that anyone actually unironically uses them.
gollark: In CS, we have a few examples of *provably* secure systems.
gollark: For example, if the court system was terrible and just asked the defendant whether they had broken the law and trusted them to be right, that would obviously be nonrobust.

References

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