Auguste Lorieux Explained

Auguste Lorieux
Birth Date:14 December 1796
Birth Place:Le Croisic
Death Place:Eaux-Bonnes
Language:French

Auguste Julien Marie Lorieux, (14 December 1796 – 27 July 1842) was a 19th-century French writer and jurisdiction consultant.

Biography

Auguste was the son of Bonaventure Ambroise Lorieux, lord of Mainguisserie, representative of Saint-Nazaire and member of the Guérande in 1790, and Julienne David de Drézigué,[1] daughter of Le Croisic’s mayor, René David de Drézigué, deputy at the Estates of Brittany. Because he was a royalist, republicans shut him in 1793. His brother, Théodore Marie Clair Lorieux was a general inspector at the corps des mines and the Mines of Paris.[2]

He was born on 14 December 1796 or 1797 in Corsica. After finishing his studies at Nantes with the best results, he learnt law at Rennes. He was nominated to procurer of the king in 1823. following the July Revolution, he regained the magistrate at the king. He was nominated as an advocate at the office in Nantes. Lorieux returned to the magistrate in 1837.

Lorieux was a member of the Société académique de Nantes et de Loire-Atlantique.

Works

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Fernand Gueriff, Historique de Saint-Nazaire: Des origines à la construction du port avec de nombreuses cartes et dessins, 1990
  2. http://www.annales.org/archives/x/theodorelorieux.html annales.org