Jean-Pierre-François de Ripert-Monclar


Jean-Pierre-François de Ripert-Monclar was a French aristocrat, landowner and lawyer.

Biography

Early life

Jean-Pierre-François de Ripert-Monclar was born in 1711 in the Château Royal de Saint-Saturnin, a family château in Saint-Saturnin-lès-Apt where his family spent their holidays. His father was General Prosecutor of the Parliament of Aix-en-Provence. He was educated at the College d'Harcourt in Paris.

Career

A landowner, King Louis XV of France granted him the marquisate of Monclar in 1769.
Like his father, he served as General Prosecutor of the Parliament of Aix-en-Provence, in 1732. In his 1750 Mémoire théologique et politique sur les mariages clandestins des protestants en France, he expressed his support for legalizing the marriages of Protestants. He was jansenist and opposed to Jesuits, as made clear in his 1762 Compte rendu des constitutions de la Société.

Personal life

He married Catherine de Lisle, daughter of Pierre-Jean de Lisle, in 1747. They resided in the Hôtel Ripert de Monclar on the Rue Roux-Alphéran in the Quartier Mazarin of Aix-en-Provence. They had a son and a daughter:
He died in 1773 in the Château Royal de Saint-Saturnin in Saint-Saturnin-lès-Apt. François de Ripert-Monclar was his descendant.

Legacy

The Rue Monclar in Aix-en-Provence is named in his honour.