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  1. Adrien Duport. Adrien Duport (6 February 1759 – 6 July 1798) was a French politician, and lawyer. He was an influential advocate in the parlement, and was prominent in opposition to the ministers Calonne and Loménie de Brienne. Life. Adrien Jean Françoise Duport was born in Paris.

  2. Adrien Jean-François Duport , nacido en París el 24 de febrero de 1759 y murió en Gais ( Appenzell Ausserrhoden ) el 6 de julio de 1798, es una figura importante al comienzo de la Revolución Francesa . Resumen. 1 Orígenes. 2 Sus muchas influencias. 3 El Partido Nacional (1787) 4 La Sociedad de los Treinta (1788-1789)

  3. Adrien Jean-François Duport, né à Paris le 24 février 1759 et mort à Gais ( Appenzell Rhodes-Extérieures) le 6 juillet 1798, est un aristocrate rallié à la cause du Tiers Etat dès le début de la Révolution française.

  4. Adrien Duport was a French magistrate who was a leading constitutional monarchist during the early stages of the French Revolution of 1789. A prominent member of the Parlement of Paris (one of the high courts of justice), Duport was elected for the nobility to the Estates-General of 1789.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Biographie d'ADRIEN DUPORT (1759-1798). Issu de la petite noblesse, Adrien Duport devient conseiller à la Chambre des enquêtes, entre dans la franc-maçonnerie, et joue un très grand rôle dans les milieux libéraux à la veille de la Révolution de 1789. Député de la noblesse de Paris aux...

  6. 27 de ene. de 2012 · Cite. Permissions. Share. Abstract. This article suggests a new interpretation of the Feuillant group during the French Revolution. In particular, it focuses on the approach of Feuillant leaders Antoine Barnave, Adrien Duport and Alexandre Lameth to the movement in favour of war in 1791–92.

  7. The group was led by Antoine Barnave, Alexandre de Lameth and Adrien Duport . History. As the Constitution of 1791 began to take its final shape, many erstwhile radical deputies such as Barnave and Le Chapelier wished for the central role played by such popular societies as the Jacobins early in the French Revolution to come to an end.