Claude Ambroise Régnier, duc de Massa (6 April 1746 – 24 June 1814), was a
French lawyer and politician.
He was a deputy in 1789, a member of the
Council of Ancients, a member of the Senate and a Minister.
Early years
Claude Ambroise Régnier was born in
Blâmont, now in
Meurthe-et-Moselle
Meurthe-et-Moselle () is a '' département'' in the Grand Est region of France, named after the rivers Meurthe and Moselle. Its prefecture and largest city is Nancy and it borders the departments of Meuse to the west, Vosges to the south, ...
, on 6 April 1746.
At that time Blâmont was in the Principality of
Salm-Salm.
His paternal grandfather was Jean-Antoine Régnier, ''procureur'' of the ''bailliage'' of Saint-Diey-des-Vosges.
His maternal grandfather was Jean-Baptiste Thiry, king's counsel in the Blâmont town hall.
His parents were Ambroise Régnier and Françoise Thiry.
In 1748 his father was an innkeeper. In 1780 he is described as an old ''fermier des domaines'' (tax collector), and in 1784 as a merchant.
Claude Régnier's mother died in 1785, aged 65. His father lived on until 1806, when he died at the age of 87.
Régnier began his studies in
Saint-Dié under his uncle, abbé Régnier, the main parish priest.
He went on the
University of Strasbourg, and graduated with a bachelor-in-law.
He entered the ''Parlement'' in 1765, and began practicing law in
Lunéville.
In 1769 Prince Louis of Salm-Salm called Régnier to
Senones
The Senones or Senonii (Gaulish: "the ancient ones") were an ancient Gallic tribe dwelling in the Seine basin, around present-day Sens, during the Iron Age and the Roman period.
Part of the Senones settled in the Italian peninsula, where the ...
and made him his counselor and Attorney General, entrusting him with the administration of the principality. Régnier left this position in 1773 to resume his career as lawyer in
Nancy, Lorraine.
There he became one of the leading lawyers in the Civil Division.
French Revolution
Régnier was enthusiastic about the
French Revolution, and on 6 April 1789 was elected deputy for the third estate for Nancy in the
Estates General.
He was a member of the legislative commission.
After the flight of the king, on 22 June 1791 Régnier was sent as commissioner to the departments of the Rhine to receive the oaths of the troops.
On return, he sat constantly on the constitutional committee, and was known for the clarity of his expression.
Régnier went underground during the
Reign of Terror
The Reign of Terror (French: ''La Terreur'', literally "The Terror") was a period of the French Revolution when, following the creation of the French First Republic, First Republic, a series of massacres and Capital punishment in France, nu ...
, only reappearing on the political scene after the promulgation of the Constitution of year III.
On 23 Vendémiaire year IV (15 October 1795) he was elected deputy for the
Meurthe Department in the
Council of Ancients, and was reelected on 23 Germinal year VII (12 April 1799).
He sat on the left.
Napoleonic era
Régnier was a partisan of
General Bonaparte and supported his coup-d'état.
On 17 Brumaire year VIII (8 November 1799), he took part in a meeting at the house of Lemercier, Chairman of the Ancients, to prepare for the planned coup.
On the morning of
18 Brumaire he presented to the council a draft decree that transferred the two legislative chambers to
Saint-Cloud.
He was appointed a member of the Senate and of the Council of State, and became one of the main editors of the civil code.
He showed a deep understanding of jurisprudence.
On 27 Fructidor year X (14 September 1802) Napoleon named Régnier chief judge and Minister of Justice, positions he held until 20 November 1813. Until 10 July 1804 he was also in charge of the Ministry of Police, which he handed over to
Joseph Fouché.
He was made a ''comte de l’Empire'' (count of the empire) on 24 April 1808 and ''duc de Massa'' (Duke of Massa di Carrara) on 15 August 1809.
On leaving the ministry of Justice Regnier was made Minister of State and president of the legislative body.
He died in Paris on 24 June 1814 a few months after Napoleon fell from power.
References
Sources
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Regnier, Claude Ambroise
1746 births
1814 deaths
Ministers of justice of France
Dukes of the First French Empire