Saint-Just, Louis Florelle de (17671794)

Saint-Just, Louis Florelle de, a prominent French Revolutionist, born at Decize, near Nevers; as a youth got into disgrace with his family and fled to Paris, where, being bitten already by the ideas of Rousseau, he flung himself heart and soul into the revolutionary movement, became the faithful henchman of Robespierre, and finally followed his master to the guillotine, having in his zeal previously declared “for Revolutionists there is no rest but in the tomb”; “he was a youth of slight stature, with mild mellow voice, enthusiast olive-complexioned, and long black hair” (17671794).

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

St. Joseph * St. Kilda
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St. Gothard
St. Helena
St. Helens
St. Helier
St. Ives
St. James's Palace
St. John
St. John
St. Johns
St. Joseph
Saint-Just, Louis Florelle de
St. Kilda
St. Lawrence
St. Ló
St. Louis
St. Lucia
St. Malo
St. Michael's
St. Michael's Mount
St. Michel, Mont
St. Nazaire