. . . . . . . . . "1370"^^ . "Charles Cochon de Lapparent"@en . . . . . . . "Charles Cochon Lapparent (24 January 1750 in Champdeniers-Saint-Denis \u2013 17 July 1825 in Poitiers) was a French politician and Minister of Police. He was born into a bourgeois family that was formerly Protestant, a religion they were required to recant. Lapparent was elected deputy of the Third Estate, and he held important functions in the National Convention, in the armies of the Republic and the committee of public health. On 9 Thermidor, he participated in the fall of Robespierre. During a meeting of the French Directory he was appointed minister of police. However, he was accused of being royalist and deported. During the time of the Consulate and the First French Empire, he held important posts, but in 1815 he was forced to leave France, being allowed to return to Poitiers after a yea"@en . "17841415"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Charles Cochon de Lapparent est un homme politique fran\u00E7ais, n\u00E9 le 24 janvier 1750 \u00E0 Champdeniers (Poitou, aujourd'hui dans les Deux-S\u00E8vres) et mort le 17 juillet 1825 \u00E0 Poitiers. N\u00E9 dans une famille bourgeoise autrefois protestante, qui a d\u00FB abjurer, Charles Cochon de Lapparent est \u00E9lu d\u00E9put\u00E9 du tiers \u00E9tat, il occupe des fonctions importantes \u00E0 la Convention nationale, dans les arm\u00E9es de la R\u00E9publique et au comit\u00E9 de salut public. Le 9 Thermidor, ce montagnard participe \u00E0 la chute de Robespierre. Pendant le Directoire, nomm\u00E9 ministre de la police, mais alors qu\u2019il est un conventionnel r\u00E9gicide, il est accus\u00E9 d\u2019\u00EAtre royaliste et d\u00E9port\u00E9. Sous le Consulat et l\u2019Empire, il occupe des fonctions importantes, mais apr\u00E8s 1815 il doit quitter la France. Toutefois il peut revenir \u00E0 Poitiers au bout d\u2019un an d\u2019exil."@fr . . "Charles Cochon de Lapparent est un homme politique fran\u00E7ais, n\u00E9 le 24 janvier 1750 \u00E0 Champdeniers (Poitou, aujourd'hui dans les Deux-S\u00E8vres) et mort le 17 juillet 1825 \u00E0 Poitiers. N\u00E9 dans une famille bourgeoise autrefois protestante, qui a d\u00FB abjurer, Charles Cochon de Lapparent est \u00E9lu d\u00E9put\u00E9 du tiers \u00E9tat, il occupe des fonctions importantes \u00E0 la Convention nationale, dans les arm\u00E9es de la R\u00E9publique et au comit\u00E9 de salut public. Le 9 Thermidor, ce montagnard participe \u00E0 la chute de Robespierre. Pendant le Directoire, nomm\u00E9 ministre de la police, mais alors qu\u2019il est un conventionnel r\u00E9gicide, il est accus\u00E9 d\u2019\u00EAtre royaliste et d\u00E9port\u00E9. Sous le Consulat et l\u2019Empire, il occupe des fonctions importantes, mais apr\u00E8s 1815 il doit quitter la France. Toutefois il peut revenir \u00E0 Poitiers au bout"@fr . . . . . . . . . . . "Charles Cochon Lapparent (24 January 1750 in Champdeniers-Saint-Denis \u2013 17 July 1825 in Poitiers) was a French politician and Minister of Police. He was born into a bourgeois family that was formerly Protestant, a religion they were required to recant. Lapparent was elected deputy of the Third Estate, and he held important functions in the National Convention, in the armies of the Republic and the committee of public health. On 9 Thermidor, he participated in the fall of Robespierre. During a meeting of the French Directory he was appointed minister of police. However, he was accused of being royalist and deported. During the time of the Consulate and the First French Empire, he held important posts, but in 1815 he was forced to leave France, being allowed to return to Poitiers after a year of exile."@en . . "Charles Cochon de Lapparent"@fr . . . . . "788842426"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .