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11101 ([return])
[ "Mémoires de Fréron." (Letter of Fréron, Nivose 6).—Guillon de Montléon, II., 391.]

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11102 ([return])
[ Decrees of October 12 and December 24.—Archives Nationales, AF. II., 44. The representatives on mission wanted to do the same thing with Marseilles. (Orders of Fréron, Barras, Salicetti, and Ricard, Nivôse 17, year II.) "The name of Marseilles, still borne by this criminal city, shall be changed. The National Convention shall be requested to give it another name. Meanwhile it shall remain nameless and be thus known." In effect, in several subsequent documents, Marseilles is called the nameless commune.]

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11103 ([return])
[ Buchez et Roux, XXVIII., 204. (Session of June 24: "Strong expressions of dissent are heard on the right." Legendre, "I demand that the first rebel, the first man there (pointing to the "Right" party) who interrupts the speaker, be sent to the Abbaye." Couhey, indeed, was sent to the Abbaye for applauding a Federalist speech.—Cf. on these three months.—Mortimer-Ternaux, vol. VIII.]

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11104 ([return])
[ Buchez et Roux, XXIX., 175.—Dauban: "La Démagogie à Paris en 1793," 436 (Narrative by Dulaure, an eye-witness).]

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11105 ([return])
[ There were really only twenty-two brought before the revolutionary tribunal.]