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The last interview between Louis XVI and his family (1793). Charles Benazech (1767/68 – 1794) was an English portrait and historical painter, and aquatint engraver. [1] Prints of his painting of Louis XVI and family, just before the monarch's execution during the French Revolution, achieved a wide circulation.
Louis XVI and his family being transferred to the Temple Prison on 13 August 1792. Engraving by Jacques François Joseph Swebach-Desfontaines, 1792.. Following the attack on the Tuileries Palace during the insurrection of 10 August 1792, King Louis XVI was imprisoned at the Temple Prison in Paris, along with his wife Marie Antoinette, their two children and his younger sister Élisabeth.
Joseph, Baron Ducreux (26 June 1735 – 24 July 1802) was a French noble, portrait painter, pastelist, miniaturist, and engraver, who was a successful portraitist at the court of Louis XVI of France, and resumed his career at the conclusion of the French Revolution.
Charles-Henri Sanson performed 2,918 executions, including that of Louis XVI. Even though he was not a supporter of the monarchy, Sanson was initially reluctant to execute the king but in the end performed the execution. As David Jordan notes, "No Monsieur de Paris had ever had the honor of executing a king, and Sanson wanted precise instructions."
The statue of King Louis XIV was donated to Louisville by the France in 1966. It was on display before being removed in 2020.
Louis XVI as a citizen-king, painting by Carteaux. Born in 1751, Carteaux followed the career of a painter, producing several works including a portrait of King Louis XVI on horseback. Following the French Revolution, he became a General and given a command of the Army of the Alps, despite the fact he had received no military training.
It is said that at the moment of the execution, the confessor uttered the celebrated words: "Son of St Louis, ascend to heaven" [2] (although this is disputed; Edgeworth himself, in his memoirs, could neither affirm nor deny them [3]). A painting depicting the Duchess of Angoulême at Edgeworth's death bed, by Alexandre-Toussaint Menjaud, 1817.
After the Revolution in France had grown increasingly radicalised and the French King Louis XVI had been executed in January 1793, Sieveking came under increasing pressure in Hamburg. He finally countered the accusation that he was a Jacobin with an open letter with the title An meine Mitbürger ("To my fellow citizens"), in which he strongly ...