:''For the Italian commune, see
Claviere''
'Étienne Clavière' (
january 27,
1735 -
December 8,
1793) was a
Swiss-born
French financier and politician of the
French Revolution.
Geneva and London
A native of
Geneva, he became one of the
democratic leaders of the
Geneva Republic, and in
1782 was forced to take refuge to the
Kingdom of Great Britain, after the armed interference of France, the
Kingdom of Sardinia and
Berne in favour of the
patrician party.
There, he met other Swiss, among them
Jean-Paul Marat and
Étienne Dumont, but their plans for a ''new Geneva'' in
Ireland —which the government of
William Pitt the Younger favoured— were given up when
Jacques Necker came to power in France, and Clavière, with most of his comrades, went to
Paris.
French Revolution
In
1789, he and Dumont allied themselves with
Honoré Mirabeau, secretly collaborating for him on the ''
Courrier de Provence'' and also preparing speeches for Mirabeau to deliver - this association with Clavière sustained Mirabeau's reputation as a financier. He was one of the members of the
abolitionist Society of the Friends of the Blacks and of the
Jacobin Club.
Clavière also published some
pamphlets under his own name, and through these and his friendship with
Jacques Pierre Brissot, whom he had met in
London, he was
Minister of Finance in the
Girondist ministry, from March to
June 12 1792 (as a suppleant member of the
Legislative Assembly for
Seine, and supported by
Jacques Pierre Brissot).
After
August 10 (the
storming of the Tuileries Palace) he was again given charge of the finances in the provisional executive council, but could not offer a remedy to France's difficulties. Clavière shared in the
fall of the Girondists, being arrested on
June 2 1793, but, for unknown reasons, was not placed on trial with the rest in October. He remained in prison until December 8, when, on receiving notice that he was to appear on the next day before the
Revolutionary Tribunal, he committed
suicide.
References
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