During the evening of
9 Thermidor (27 July 1794) Coffinhal, together with 8 or 10,000 men from the
sections and a company of artillery, succeeded in bringing
Hanriot from the
Committee of General Security to the
Hôtel de Ville, Paris. The Convention then declared all the insurgents to be outlaws. After midnight the forces of the Convention stormed the building. Some accounts say that Coffinhal pushed the drunken Hanriot out of a window, shouting 'You fool! It is your cowardice that has lost us!' According to
Ernest Hamel this was one of the many legends spread by
Barère. Coffinhal managed to escape and made his way along the banks of the Seine to the
Île des Cygnes where boatmen from his home region of
Cantal concealed him. Eventually hunger forced him to break cover, and on 5 August he made for the house of his mistress Mme Nègre in the
rue Montorgueil, but she refused to take him in. He came across someone who owed him money, who agreed to hide him, and then went straight to the police to denounce him. Nine days after his initial escape Coffinhal was arrested, totally exhausted. The Revolutionary Tribunal itself had been suspended by this time, and he was condemned to death on 18 Thermidor (6 August 1794) by the criminal tribunal of the département, based on simple identification. The same day, the
tumbrel took him on his own from the Conciergerie to the
Place de Grève where he was guillotined. It is said that as he mounted the scaffold, the jeering crowd yelled at him the phrase he had used so much when presiding at the Revolutionary Tribunal - 'Coffinhal, tu n'as pas la parole!' ('Coffinhal, it's not your turn to speak!'). He was the 55th person executed under the
purges of the
Thermidorian reaction. After his execution, an inventory was drawn up of his possessions, which included a cellar of 237 bottles of wine, with 300 empty bottles, and an additional full barrel, amounting to 225 litres of wine all told. == Notes ==