Gilbert Romme

French politician and mathematician (1750-1795) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles-Gilbert Romme (26 March 1750 – 17 June 1795) was a French politician and mathematician who developed the French Republican Calendar.[citation needed]

Born26 March 1750
Died17 June 1795(1795-06-17) (aged 45)
Quick facts 31st President of the National Convention, Preceded by ...
Gilbert Romme
Gilbert Romme
31st President of the National Convention
In office
21 November 1793  6 December 1793
Preceded byPierre Antoine Laloy
Succeeded byJean-Henri Voulland
Personal details
Born26 March 1750
Died17 June 1795(1795-06-17) (aged 45)
Cause of deathSuicide
PartyThe Mountain
OccupationPolitician and Mathematician
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Biography

Charles Gilbert Romme was born in Riom, Puy-de-Dôme, in the Auvergne region of France, where he received an education in medicine and mathematics.[1][2] After spending five years in Paris, he went to Russia to become the tutor of Pavel Alexandrovich Stroganov. He returned to Paris in 1788 and entered political life.[citation needed]

He was a member of the Masonic lodge, Les Neuf Sœurs.[3][4]

Elected on 10 September 1791 to the Legislative Assembly, Romme aligned himself with the Girondists, but after his election to the National Convention on 6 September 1792, he sided with the Montagnards.[citation needed]

He voted in favour of the death sentence for Louis XVI.[5][6] Later, in the events leading up to the Reign of Terror, he was arrested by Girondist supporters and was imprisoned in Caen for two months.[citation needed]

During his tenure in National Convention, Romme served in the Committee of Public Education [fr] (Comité de l’instruction Publique), where he presented his report on the republican calendar on 17 September 1793 and then developed an agricultural almanac based on the new calendar.[7] Aware of their military importance, he was also an early supporter of semaphore telegraphs.[citation needed] He served as president of the Convention from 21 November to 6 December 1793. [citation needed]

Because he was on an assignment to organise gun production for the navy, he had no hand in the coup of 9 Thermidor an II (27 July 1794), which resulted in the fall of the Robespierre (and ultimately led to the return of the Girondists).[citation needed]

When rioting sans-culottes, demanding bread and the Jacobin constitution, violently occupied the Convention on 1 Prairial an III (20 May 1795), Romme supported their demands. This insurrection was quickly put down however, and he and other Montagnards were arrested.[citation needed] While waiting for their trial, the defendants agreed to commit suicide in case of a death sentence.[citation needed]

On 29 Prairial (17 June), Paris, France, Romme and five others were sentenced to the guillotine. With a knife hidden by Jean-Marie Goujon, he stabbed himself repeatedly while on the staircase leading from the courtroom, and died - his last words are reported to have been "I die for the republic".[citation needed]

In Romme le Montagnard (1833), Marc de Vissac described Romme as a small, awkward and clumsy man with an ill complexion and a dull orator but also as possessing a pleasant and instructive style of conversation.[citation needed]

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