Martial Herman

Summary

Martial Joseph Armand Herman (29 August 1759, Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise – 7 May 1795, Paris) (guillotined), was a lawyer and a chief judge during the Reign of Terror. His most famous cases were against Marie Antoinette and Georges Danton. As the commissioner of police, he dealt with the Luxembourg prison conspiracies, shortly before the Jacobin regime fell.[1]

Martial Joseph Armand Herman
Chief judge during the Reign of Terror
Born29 August 1759
Died7 May 1795(1795-05-07) (aged 35)
Cause of deathGuillotine
OccupationLawyer
Signature

Life edit

Martial was born in a family of lawyers. On 26 July 1783, he was admitted to the bar, and in 1786 he bought the post of substitute attorney general of the provincial Estates of Artois, which seated in Arras. In 1790, he founded the local club of Jacobins together with his younger brother. In 1791, he was elected criminal court judge in the Pas-de-Calais. In 1792, he married a lower class woman from Willerval, who could not read; the couple had one child. On 28 August 1793, on instigation of Robespierre he replaced Jacques-Bernard-Marie Montané as president of the Revolutionary Tribunal. He presided at the trial of Marie-Antoinette, and the Girondins in October, Philippe Égalité, Madame Roland, and Jean Sylvain Bailly in November, and Jacques Hébert, Georges Danton and Camille Desmoulins in March/April 1794.[2][3] On the proposal of Lazare Carnot, Herman set up twelve commissions created by the executive decree of 12 Germinal (1 April). They replaced the six ministries and their offices, of which Herman chaired the first (general administration and courts). René-François Dumas succeeded Herman when Herman was appointed commissioner of civil administration, police and courts after Jules-François Paré. Herman lived during this time at 19 Place Vendôme.[4]

Three days after 9 thermidor (30 July 1794), Herman was arrested and spent ten months in prison.[5][6] In his first hours of captivity, Herman drafted a supporting memoir. He wrote that he always helped the wives and children of the detainees, etc. On 6 May 1795, after receiving the verdict sentencing him to death - with a majority of one vote - he flung his hat out of the window in a moment of rage. It was Scellier who threw a pamphlet at the presiding judge Liger-Verdigny.[7] He was guillotined on the Place de Grève, at about eleven o'clock in the morning, together with Fouquier-Tinville the public prosecutor; Scellier (vice chairman of the Revolutionary Court), Lanne (judge) and Herman's assistant; Foucault (judge); Garnier-Launay (judge); Renaudin (juror); Leroy (juror), Vilate (juror); Prieur (juror), Chatelet (juror), Girard (juror); Boyaval; Trey; Verney, and Dupaumier. [8]

References edit

  1. ^ Robespierre by John Hardman, p. 161-167
  2. ^ Fatal Purity: Robespierre and the French Revolution by Ruth Scurr
  3. ^ The public prosecutor of the terror, Antoine Quentin Fouquier-Tinville, p. 250-254
  4. ^ The public prosecutor of the terror, Antoine Quentin Fouquier-Tinville, p. 228
  5. ^ BOUTBOUL Julien, Un Rouage du Gouvernement Révolutionnaire
  6. ^ Dictionnaire biographique du département du Pas-de-Calais: ou, Histoire ... par Adolphe de Cardevacque, p. 287
  7. ^ The public prosecutor of the terror, Antoine Quentin Fouquier-Tinville, p. 301, 283
  8. ^ The public prosecutor of the terror, Antoine Quentin Fouquier-Tinville, p. 294

Sources edit

  • Mémoire Justificatif Pour Le Citoyen Herman - Thermidor An II (1794)
  • Boutboul, Julien Un rouage du Gouvernement révolutionnaire : la Commission des administrations civiles, police et tribunaux (germinal an II-brumaire an IV), vol. II (Paris, 2004)
  • Landeux, Philippe Le tribunal révolutionnaire de Paris (1793-1795) (2017)
Political offices
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
8 April 1794 – 20 April 1794
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of the Interior
8 April 1794 – 20 April 1794
Succeeded by
Pierre Bénézech