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  • Honor?Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau, was the son of Victor.
  • He resumed writing and met fellow prisoner Comte de Mirabeau, who also wrote erotic works.
  • These included the Comte de Mirabeau, a popular pamphleteer who repeated ideals that had been the basis for the American Revolution.
  • Brougham notes the exchange had in France previously been ascribed to Honor?Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau and Cardinal Jean-Sifrein Maury.
  • Noble representatives of the Third Estate were among the most passionate revolutionaries in attendance, including Jean Joseph Mounier and the comte de Mirabeau.
  • The Comte de Mirabeau wrote a scathing indictment of " lettres de cachet " while imprisoned in the dungeon of Vincennes ( by " lettre de cachet " obtained by his father ).
  • In 1785 Honor?Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau was approached by Franklin, who was at the time stationed in Paris and suggested to him to write something about the society directed at the French public.
  • On retiring from the service, he married Fran鏾ise de Castellane with whom he had three sons : Victor ( marquis de Mirabeau ), Jean Antoine ( bailli de Mirabeau ) and Louis Alexandre ( comte de Mirabeau ).
  • His continual attacks against Jacques Necker, Jean Sylvain Bailly, the comte de Mirabeau, the Legislative Assembly, the National Convention, the 閙igr閟, and King Louis XVI himself caused several decrees of outlawry and accusation against him and attempts to suppress his journal.
  • Like other M閠ro stations, Mirabeau was built using the cut-and-cover method; as a result, it lies directly underneath rue Mirabeau, which gives the station its name ( which in turn is named after Honor?Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau, a statesman during the French Revolution ).
  • Upon the death of the popular French orator and statesman Honor?Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau on 2 April 1791, the National Constituent Assembly, whose president had been Mirabeau, ordered that the building be changed from a church to a mausoleum for the interment of great Frenchmen, retaining Quatrem鑢e de Quincy to oversee the project.
  • In March 1789, Jean Beno顃 Nicolas Desmoulins was nominated as deputy to the Comte de Mirabeau, a powerful political figure within the Estates-General who positioned himself as a bridge between the aristocracy and the emerging reformist movement, briefly enlisted Desmoulins to write for his newspaper at this time, strengthening Desmoulins'reputation as a journalist.
  • Among its members were Jean Sylvain Bailly, Mayor of Paris; Marquis de La Fayette, Commander-in-chief of the National Guard ( France ); Fran鏾is Alexandre Fr閐閞ic, duc de la Rochefoucauld-Liancourt, Isaac Ren?Guy le Chapelier, Honor?Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau, Emmanuel Joseph Siey鑣, Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-P閞igord, and Nicolas de Condorcet.
  • The creation of the private water company created a bitter political struggle between those who supported the company, including the playwright Pierre Beaumarchais, the author of the " Marriage of Figaro ", who was one of the directors and became wealthy from the water company, and those who opposed it, including the guild of water-porters, whose jobs were threatened, led by the Comte de Mirabeau.
  • Other works of French erotica from this period include " Th閞鑣e Philosophe " ( 1748 ) by Jean-Baptiste de Boyer, Marquis d'Argens which describes a girl's initiation into the secrets of both philosophy and sex .; " The Lifted Curtain or Laura's Education ", about a young girl's sexual initiation by her father, written by the French revolutionary politician Comte de Mirabeau; also Les Liaisons dangereuses ( Dangerous Liaisons ) by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos, first published in 1782.
  • Upon the death of the Comte de Mirabeau in April 1791, Desmoulins ( to whom Mirabeau had, at one time, been a great patron and friend ) countered the predominantly sentimental and forgiving eulogies that appeared in the Parisian press by publishing a brutal attack in which he declared the late Mirabeau to be the " god of orators, liars, and thieves . " This presaged later about-face attacks against prominent and once-sympathetic Revolutionary figures, such as Jean Pierre Brissot, by Desmoulins-a method which would, ultimately, be turned against him by his own former friends.