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replied that the hall could not be cleared "except at the point of bayonets". Brézé withdrew in the face of
Mirabeau's aggressive stance but followed traditional protocol by walking slowly backwards with his embroidered tricorn on his head.
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Brézé reported the defiance of the Third Estate back to the king, who was awaiting developments in the nearby royal apartments. Louis reportedly responded "Damn! Oh well let them stay".
111:, and resumed his functions as guardian of ceremonial. He died on 27 January 1829, when he was succeeded in the peerage and at court by his son Scipion (1793–1845).
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of the Third Estate was perhaps inevitable, but little attempt was made to adapt archaic etiquette to changed circumstances. Brézé did not formally intimate to
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the proclamation of the royal séance until 20 June, when the carpenters were about to enter the hall to prepare for the event, thus provoking the
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During the opening stages of the
Estates-General of 1789 it fell to Brézé to regulate the questions of etiquette and precedence between the
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49:(1762–1829) was a member of the French nobility who at the age of twenty-seven played a role in the meeting of the
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in 1792 Brézé emigrated for a short time, but though he returned to France he was spared during the
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68:. That as the immediate representative of the crown he would offend the susceptibilities of the
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One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the
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53:. Brézé had succeeded his father Thomas as court master of the ceremonies to
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159:. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 514.
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after the haut-relief
Mirabeau answering to Dreux-Brézé by
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47:Henri-Évrard, marquis de Dreux-Brézé
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177:People of the French Revolution
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97:Terror
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