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Argenson, Marc René de Voyer d'
(1771-1842).
Had been Lafayette's adjutant general; with Lafayette and Benjamin Constant, Argenson, as a member of the Parliament of a Hundred Days, was part of the Deputation of Haguenau, whose purpose was to make the anti-Napoleonic alliance acknowledge that the Bourbons had no claim to the French throne; from 1815 he was a member of almost all assemblies of deputies; took every opportunity to reject acts that seemed to him arbitrary, and to advocate the adoption of appropriate measures to promote the welfare of the poorer classes.
British Envoys to Germany, Vol. I, p. 203 |
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