Jean-Pierre-André Amar or
Jean-Baptiste-André Amar (
May 11,
1755—
December 21,
1816) was a
French political figure of the
Revolution.
Life
Early activities
Born in a rich family of cloth merchants in
Grenoble, he became a
lawyer for the local
parlement in 1774. Ten years later, he purchased the title of
Trésorier de France, which gave him a title in the
French nobility, for 200,000
livres.
In 1790, Amar was elected vice-president of the Grenoble directory, and became a deputy to the National Convention for the département of Isère, and joined The Mountain, voting in favor of King Louis XVI's execution during his trial.
Prominence
Sent on mission with
Jean-Marie-François Merlino to
Ain and Isère in early 1793), he oversaw the
levée en masse of 300,000 soldiers brought about by the outbreak of the
French Revolutionary Wars and he made widespread arrests of "counter-revolutionaries". Amar entered the
Committee of General Security after the events of
June 2, 1793 (on
June 16), and was, with
Marc-Guillaume Alexis Vadier, one of its most influential members. He was noted for his attacks on the
Girondists and his order to arrest the deputies who had protested against the violence of The Mountain.
He followed this with his involvement in the downfall of the partisans of Georges Danton (the Indulgants) and the Hébertists in (1794). However, Amar grew wary of Maximilien Robespierre and the Reign of Terror, and was involved in the Thermidorian Reaction from its very beginning.
Later life
Arrested himself as a former partisan of Terror (
April 2,
1795), he benefitted from an
amnesty on
October 26. Amar then opposed the establishment of the
French Directory in November, and took part in the
conspiracy of
Gracchus Babeuf early in 1796; tried by the Court in
Vendôme, he was
acquitted on
May 26.
He retired from public life, and lived most of his remaining years in Isère and Savoie, discovering devotional mysticism based on the works of Emanuel Swedenborg. He died in Paris.