
DES CONSPIRATIONS ET DE LA JUSTICE POLITIQUE,
PRÉFACE.
TABLE DES CHAPITRES.
CHAPITRE Ier. But de cet écrit.
CHAPITRE II. De la politique et de la justice.
CHAPITRE III. Des conspirations.
CHAPITRE IV. Des faits généraux.
CHAPITRE V. Des agens provocateurs.
CHAPITRE VI. Du ministère public.
CHAPITRE VII. Des restrictions apportées à la publicité des débats judiciaires.
The work opens with a vivid account of a dramatic courtroom drama surrounding an 1800 attempt on a king’s life, using that episode to probe how law strives to balance the protection of sovereign authority with the rights of the accused. By placing this historic case alongside contemporary upheavals in Spain, Naples and Portugal, the author sketches a portrait of justice under pressure. The tone is scholarly yet accessible, inviting listeners to follow the argument as it unfolds.
Throughout the narrative, legal principles are examined through the lens of political rivalry, showing how partisan fervor can tempt societies to sacrifice fairness for expediency. The author stresses that true jurisprudence must resist the pull of emotion and safeguard both public order and individual liberty. Concrete examples make abstract concepts feel immediate and relevant.
Supplementary notes on the recent revolutions enrich the discussion, linking past precedents to the challenges of modern governance. Listeners are prompted to reflect on whether the law can remain impartial when the stakes are high, and what that means for the stability of any nation.
Language
fr
Duration
~2 hours (129K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Paris: Ladvocat, 1821.
Credits
Laurent Vogel (This file was produced from images generously made available by the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF/Gallica))
Release date
2024-03-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1787–1874
A major voice in 19th-century France, this historian and statesman helped shape the July Monarchy and wrote influential works on European civilization and English history. His life joined scholarship and politics so closely that each continually informed the other.
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