Saint-Just begins to give a speech in …

Years: 1794 - 1794
July

Saint-Just begins to give a speech in support of Robespierre the next day.

However, those who had seen him working on his speech the night before expect accusations to arise from it.

He has time to give only a small part of his speech before Jean-Lambert Tallien interrupts him.

While the accusations begin to pile up, Saint-Just remains uncharacteristically silent.

Robespierre then attempts to secure the tribunal to speak but his voice is shouted down.

Robespierre soon finds himself at a loss for words after one deputy calls for his arrest and another, Marc-Guillaume Alexis Vadier, gives a mocking impression of him.

When one deputy realizes Robespierre's inability to respond, the man shouts, "The blood of Danton chokes him!"

A faction within the National Convention including Jacobin revolutionary Paul Francois Jean Nicolas, Vicomte de Barras and military commissioner Lazare Nicolas Marguerite Carnot, topples Robespierre.

The Convention orders the arrest of Robespierre, his brother Augustin, Couthon, Saint-Just, François Hanriot and Le Bas.

Troops from the Commune, under General Coffinhal, arrive to free the prisoners and then march against the Convention itself.

The Convention responds by ordering troops of its own under Barras to be called out.

When the Commune's troops hear the news of this, order begins to break down, and Hanriot orders his remaining troops to withdraw to the Hôtel de Ville, where Robespierre and his supporters also gather.

The Convention declares them to be outlaws, meaning that upon verification the fugitives can be executed within twenty-four hours without a trial.

As the night goes on, the forces of the Commune desert the Hôtel de Ville and, at around two in the morning, those of the Convention under the command of Barras arrive there.

In order to avoid capture, Augustin Robespierre throws himself out of a window, only to break both of his legs; Couthon is found lying at the bottom of a staircase; Le Bas commits suicide; another radical shoots himself in the head.

Robespierre tries to kill himself with a pistol but manages only to shatter his lower jaw, although some eyewitnesses claim that Robespierre had been shot by Charles-André Merda.

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