Vincent van Gogh | François Mitterrand | Vincent Price | François Truffaut | Claude François | François Villon | François Rabelais | François Hollande | St. Vincent | Jean-François Lyotard | Jean-François Millet | Frank Vincent | François-René de Chateaubriand | Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | Vincent D'Onofrio | Vincent d'Indy | François Boucher | Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul | François Fénelon | Rhonda Vincent | François Tombalbaye | François de La Rochefoucauld (writer) | Charles François Dumouriez | Vincent Scully | Vincent Pastore | Vincent | St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney | St Vincent's Hospital | John Vincent Atanasoff | John Jervis, 1st Earl of St Vincent |
The Revolutionary Tribunal condemned Momoro to death, and he loudly replied "You accuse me, who have given everything for the Revolution!" He was guillotined with Hébert, Ronsin, Vincent and other leading Hébertistes the following afternoon, 4 Germinal, Year II (24 March 1794).
The Chadian Armed Forces (Forces Armées Tchadiennes or FAT) were the army of the central government of Chad from 1960 to 1979, under the southern presidents François Tombalbaye and Félix Malloum, until the downfall of the latter in 1979, when the head of the gendarmerie, Wadel Abdelkader Kamougué, assumed command.
He appeared before the Revolutionary Tribunal of Paris and was condemned to death by it on 24 March 1794 (4 germinal year II), as an accomplice of Jacques-René Hébert, Charles Philippe Ronsin, François -Nicolas Vincent, Mazuel, Antoine-François Momoro (all already condemned) in trying to dissolve the national representative assembly and put a tyrant in place over the state.
He was related to Louis Déjoie (his great-grandfather Thomas married Leonie Déjoie), who lost the 1957 Haitian presidential election to François "Papa Doc" Duvalier, and although the family also had connections to the new president, Gaetjens's younger brothers became associated with a group of exiles in the Dominican Republic who wanted to stage a coup.
François Nicolas Vincent Campenon (Saint-François, Guadeloupe, 29 March 1772 - Villecresnes, 29 November 1843) was a French poet and translator from Latin and English.