Jean-Jacques-RégisdeCambacérès, Duke of Parma ( French: [ʒɑ̃ ʒak ʁeʒis də kɑ̃baseʁɛs]; 18 October 1753 – 8 March 1824), was a French nobleman, lawyer, freemason and statesman during the French Revolution and the First Empire.
Jean-Jacques-Régis de Cambacérès (18. října 1753 Montpellier – 8. března 1824 Paříž) byl francouzský právník a politik, jeden z autorů zákoníku Code civil a v letech 1799 až 1804 konzul.
Français : Jean-Jacques-RégisdeCambacérès, duc de Parme (1753-1824). Lithographie de Delpech, publié à Paris vers 1830 (la part de coloration est moderne).
Historians -- of which I am only the most recent -- have long known that Cambacérès had nothing to do with the elimination of homosexuality from French criminal law.
Jean-Jacques-RégisdeCambacérès, duke de Parme was a French statesman and legal expert who was second consul with Napoleon Bonaparte and then archchancellor of the empire. As Napoleon’s principal adviser on all juridical matters from 1800…