Nicolas Marie Quinette | |
---|---|
Born | Paris | 16 September 1762
Died | 14 June 1821 Brussels | (aged 58)
Nicolas Marie Quinette, Baron de Rochemont (16 September 1762 in Paris – 14 June 1821 in Brussels) was a French politician.
He was a notary in Soissons. He was elected to the Legislative Assembly in 1791, a member of the Convention, and Member of the Council of Five Hundred, and Interior Minister.
He was a commissioner in the inquiry of Charles François Dumouriez, was captured by the Austrians, and exchanged for Madame Royale, Marie Thérèse of France, daughter of Louis XVI.[1]
In 1796, he presided from 21 November 1796 to 20 December. During the Hundred Days, on 2 June 1815, he sat in the Imperial House of Peers.[2]