Born at
Versailles, he was keeping a butcher's shop in
Saint Germain,
Paris, by 1789. He was an ardent supporter of the ideas of the Revolution and a leader of the
Storming of the Bastille; a close friend of
Georges Danton, Legendre was a member of the
Jacobin Club, and one of the founders of the club of the
Cordeliers. In spite of his
diction problems and lack of education, he became a noted
orator. He was present in the crowd that demanded the removal of
King Louis XVI on
Champ de Mars in July 1791 (and during the subsequent massacre ordered by
Jean Sylvain Bailly). Louis Legendre also took part in the
10 August attack on the
Tuileries Palace (1792). It was alleged that the day before the execution, on 20 January, he made a motion in the tribune of the Jacobins that the body of the ex-king be divided into 84 pieces so that one could send one to each of the 84 departments of the Republic. ==Convention and Terror==