1911 Encyclopædia Britannica/Rabaut Saint-Étienne, Jean Paul
RABAUT SAINT-ÉTIENNE, JEAN PAUL (1743–1793), French revolutionist, was born at Nimes, the son of Paul Rabaut (q.v.), the additional surname of Saint-Etienne being assumed from a small property near Nimes. Like his father, he became a pastor, and distinguished himself by his zeal for his co-religionists, working energetically to obtain the recognition of the civil rights which had been granted to them by Louis XVI. in 1788. Having gained a great reputation by his Histoire primitive de la Grèce, he was elected deputy to the States General in 1789 by the third estate of the bailliage of Nimes. In the Constituent Assembly he worked on the framing of the constitution, spoke against the establishment of the republic, which he considered ridiculous, and voted for the suspensive veto, as likely to strengthen the position of the crown. In the Convention he sat among the Girondists, opposed the trial of Louis XVI., was a member of the commission of twelve, and was proscribed with his party. He remained in hiding for some time, but was ultimately discovered and guillotined on the 5th of December 1793.
See J. A. Dartique, Rabaut St-Etienne d l’Assemblée Constituante (Paris, 1903); and A. Lods, “Correspondance de Rabaut St-Etienne” in La Révolution française (1898), “L’arrestation de Rabaut St Etienne” in La Révolution française for 1903 (cf. the same review for 1901), and “Les débuts de Rabaut St-Etienne aux États Généraux et à la Convention” in the Bulletin historique de la Société de l’histoire du protestantism français (1901), also an Essai sur la vie de Rabaut Saint-Etienne (1893) separately published. An edition of the Œuvres de Rabaut Saint-Etienne (2 vols., 1826) contains a notice by Collin de Plancy.