Camille Desmoulins
![Portrait of Camille Desmoulins, c. 1790 ([[Musée Carnavalet]])](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4f/Camille_Desmoulins_2.jpg)
A lawyer by training, Desmoulins was enthralled by the Revolution from its outbreak. On 12 July 1789, shortly after Louis XVI dismissed his popular finance minister Jacques Necker, Desmoulins delivered an impassioned call to arms to a crowd before the Palais-Royal. His agitation sparked widespread unrest in Paris, which culminated in the Storming of the Bastille two days later. Through his newfound fame, Desmoulins quickly established himself as a prominent radical pamphleteer. He advocated explicitly in favour of republicanism and revolutionary violence, and mounted relentless attacks on not only the Ancien Régime, but also once-sympathetic revolutionary figures such as Jacques Pierre Brissot. His campaigns ultimately contributed to the fall of the Girondist faction and the beginning of the Reign of Terror.
During the Terror, Desmoulins and his close friend and political ally Georges Danton distanced themselves from Maximilien Robespierre's radical Montagnards. Through his new journal ''Le Vieux Cordelier'', he criticized the excesses of the Revolutionary Government and made pleas for clemency, which enraged Robespierre and eventually led to his downfall. In April 1794, Desmoulins was sentenced to death by the Revolutionary Tribunal and guillotined alongside Danton and other accused Dantonists. Provided by Wikipedia