Background
He was born at Thionville, the son of a procureur in the bailliage of Thionville.
politician member of parliament in France
He was born at Thionville, the son of a procureur in the bailliage of Thionville.
He is usually called "Merlin de Thionville" ("Merlin of Thionville") to distinguish him from Philippe-Antoine Merlin de Douai. After studying theology, he began a career in law, and in 1788 was an avocat at the parlement of Metz. In 1790 he was elected municipal officer of Thionville, and was sent by the department of Moselle to the Legislative Assembly.
On 23 October 1791 he moved and carried the institution of a committee of surveillance, of which he became a member.
lieutenant was he who proposed the law sequestrating the property of the émigrés, and he took an important part in the émeute of 20 June 1792 and in the revolution of 10 August of the same year. He was elected deputy to the National Convention, and pressed for the execution of Louis XVI, but a mission to the army prevented his attending the trial.
He displayed great bravery in the defence of Mainz. He took part in the Thermidorian Reaction which followed the fall of Robespierre, sat in the Council of Five Hundred under the Directory, and at the coup d"état of the 18th Fructidor (4 September 1797) demanded the deportation of certain republican members.
He retired into private life at the proclamation of the Consulate, and lived in retirement under the Consulate and the Empire.
Antoine Christophe Merlin was an influential democratic radical during the early years of the French Revolution, who became one of the leading organizers of the conservative Thermidorian reaction that followed the collapse of the radical democratic Jacobin regime of 1793–1794.
Council of Five Hundred. In 1798 he ceased to be a member of the Council of Five Hundred, and was appointed director-general of posts, being sent subsequently to organize the army of Italy.
Christophe Antoine Merlin was a French division commander during the Napoleonic Wars.