Friday, May 24, 2019

Jean-Paul Marat

Jean-Paul Marat

The Death of Marat, oil painting by Jacques-Louis David, 1793; in the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium.FRENCH POLITICIAN, PHYSICIAN, AND JOURNALIST

Jean-Paul Marat, (born May 24, 1743, Boudry, near Neuchâtel, Switzerland—died July 13, 1793, Paris, France), French politician, physician, and journalist, a leader of the radical Montagnard faction during the French Revolution. He was assassinated in his bath by Charlotte Corday, a young Girondin conservative.

Early Scientific Work

Marat, after obscure years in France and other European countries, became a well-known doctor in London in the 1770s and published a number of books on scientific and philosophical subjects. His Essay on the Human Soul (1771) had little success, but A Philosophical Essay on Man (1773) was translated into French and published in Amsterdam (1775–76). His early political works included The Chains of Slavery (1774), an attack on despotism addressed to British voters, in which he first /.../

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