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- Law_of_Suspects abstract "Note: This decree should not be confused with the Law of General Security (French: Loi de sûreté générale), also known as the "Law of Suspects," adopted by Napoleon III in 1858 that allowed punishment for any prison action, and permitted the arrest and deportation, without judgment, of anyone convicted of political offenses after 1848.The Law of Suspects (French: Loi des suspects) was a decree passed by the Committee of Public Safety on 17 September 1793, during the Reign of Terror following the French Revolution. It marked a significant weakening of individual freedoms that led to "revolutionary paranoia" that swept the nation.With the Law of Suspects, anyone at all was deemed suspicious "who, by their conduct or their relationships, either by their words or writings, have been partisans of tyranny or federalism and enemies of freedom, those whose [actions] cannot justify, in the manner prescribed by the decree of 21 March, their financial means and remunerations from their civic duties; those to whom have been denied citizenship certificates, removed by public officials or suspended from their functions by the National Convention or its commissioners and have not been reinstated; those former nobles, all the husbands, wives, fathers, mothers, son or daughters, brothers or sisters, and agents of émigrés, who have not consistently demonstrated their commitment to the Revolution, those who emigrated from the interval between 1 July 1789 and its release between 30 March–8 March 1792, even though they returned to France within the time prescribed by such order or earlier."The law ordered the arrest of all avowed enemies and likely enemies of the Revolution, which included nobles, relatives of émigrés, officials removed from office, officers suspected of treason, and hoarders of goods. The following year, it was expanded and became more strict. Implementation of the law and arrests were entrusted to oversight committees, and not to the legal authorities. It also introduced the maxim that subjects had to prove their innocence, which was later extended by the Law of 22 Prairial.".
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageExternalLink ahrf_0003-4436_1990_num_280_1_1322.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageID "754871".
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageLength "10006".
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageOutDegree "35".
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageRevisionID "644881005".
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Category:1793_events_of_the_French_Revolution.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Category:1793_in_France.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Category:1793_in_law.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Category:French_law.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Committee_of_Public_Safety.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Decree.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink French_Directory.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink French_First_Republic.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink French_Republican_Calendar.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink French_Republican_calendar.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink French_Revolution.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink General_maximum.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Jean_Jacques_Régis_de_Cambacérès.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Law.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Law_of_22_Prairial.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Legislative_Assembly_(France).
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Napoleon_III.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink National_Convention.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Nobility.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Paris_Commune_(French_Revolution).
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Philippe-Antoine_Merlin_de_Douai.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Priesthood_(Catholic_Church).
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Refractory_clergy.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Reign_of_Terror.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Sans-culottes.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Thermidorian_Reaction.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Treason.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink War_in_the_Vendée.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLink Émigré.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageWikiLinkText "Law of Suspects".
- Law_of_Suspects hasPhotoCollection Law_of_Suspects.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:French_Revolution_navbox.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-fr.
- Law_of_Suspects wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Law_of_Suspects subject Category:1793_events_of_the_French_Revolution.
- Law_of_Suspects subject Category:1793_in_France.
- Law_of_Suspects subject Category:1793_in_law.
- Law_of_Suspects subject Category:French_law.
- Law_of_Suspects hypernym Decree.
- Law_of_Suspects type Article.
- Law_of_Suspects type Event.
- Law_of_Suspects type Article.
- Law_of_Suspects type Event.
- Law_of_Suspects comment "Note: This decree should not be confused with the Law of General Security (French: Loi de sûreté générale), also known as the "Law of Suspects," adopted by Napoleon III in 1858 that allowed punishment for any prison action, and permitted the arrest and deportation, without judgment, of anyone convicted of political offenses after 1848.The Law of Suspects (French: Loi des suspects) was a decree passed by the Committee of Public Safety on 17 September 1793, during the Reign of Terror following the French Revolution. ".
- Law_of_Suspects label "Law of Suspects".
- Law_of_Suspects sameAs Ley_de_los_Sospechosos.
- Law_of_Suspects sameAs Loi_des_suspects.
- Law_of_Suspects sameAs Legge_dei_sospetti.
- Law_of_Suspects sameAs Dekret_o_podejrzanych.
- Law_of_Suspects sameAs Lei_dos_Suspeitos.
- Law_of_Suspects sameAs m.038kqp.
- Law_of_Suspects sameAs Закон_о_подозрительных.
- Law_of_Suspects sameAs Q1574972.
- Law_of_Suspects sameAs Q1574972.
- Law_of_Suspects sameAs 嫌疑犯法令.
- Law_of_Suspects wasDerivedFrom Law_of_Suspects?oldid=644881005.
- Law_of_Suspects isPrimaryTopicOf Law_of_Suspects.