Null Set of four medallions : -Bronze medallion with the profile of Baron de Lon…
Description

Set of four medallions : -Bronze medallion with the profile of Baron de Longueve, state councillor, deputy of Loiret. Diameter: 16 cm. -Oval medallion with the profile of Marianne in bronze. 17 x 13 cm. -Medallion in cast iron with a profile of a man in the antique style. 9 cm. -Medallion in cast iron patinated with the profile of the cutthroats of Gallicia (1840): Jakob SCZELA and Prince METTERNICH. Diam: 9 cm. -British motif in cast iron with crowned garter and "HONI SOIT QUI MAL Y PENSE" 250/300€ Biography: Jean-Louis Henry de Longuêve (1752-1841) First lawyer of the king at the bailliage, the presidial seat and the châtelet of Orléans, he was elected deputy of the third party to the States General by the bailliage of Orléans, on March 27, 1789. Appointed secretary of the Constituent Assembly, he was the author of the report on the troubles of Schlestadt. He returned to private life after the session, and was threatened for a moment during the Terror. He lived away from business during the Empire, the second Restoration appointed him on August 14, 1815 as State Councillor. On August 22, he was elected deputy by the college of the department of Loiret, and was then successively re-elected by the same college until 1827. He voted almost constantly with the majority.

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Set of four medallions : -Bronze medallion with the profile of Baron de Longueve, state councillor, deputy of Loiret. Diameter: 16 cm. -Oval medallion with the profile of Marianne in bronze. 17 x 13 cm. -Medallion in cast iron with a profile of a man in the antique style. 9 cm. -Medallion in cast iron patinated with the profile of the cutthroats of Gallicia (1840): Jakob SCZELA and Prince METTERNICH. Diam: 9 cm. -British motif in cast iron with crowned garter and "HONI SOIT QUI MAL Y PENSE" 250/300€ Biography: Jean-Louis Henry de Longuêve (1752-1841) First lawyer of the king at the bailliage, the presidial seat and the châtelet of Orléans, he was elected deputy of the third party to the States General by the bailliage of Orléans, on March 27, 1789. Appointed secretary of the Constituent Assembly, he was the author of the report on the troubles of Schlestadt. He returned to private life after the session, and was threatened for a moment during the Terror. He lived away from business during the Empire, the second Restoration appointed him on August 14, 1815 as State Councillor. On August 22, he was elected deputy by the college of the department of Loiret, and was then successively re-elected by the same college until 1827. He voted almost constantly with the majority.

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