These actions struck fear in the population, persuading liberal and moderate electors (48,000 of the 72,000 voters eligible under the franchise in force) to vote for the
ultra-royalists in
the August 1815 elections. According to
Winkler Prins (2002), the royalist electoral victory 'provided the Terror legality'. Of 402 members, the first Chamber of Deputies of the
Restoration was composed of 350 ultra-royalists; the king himself thus named it the
Chambre introuvable ("the Unobtainable Chamber"), called as such because the Chamber was "more royalist than the king" (
plus royalistes que le roi) in Louis XVIII's words. Meanwhile, the upper house, the
Chamber of Peers, whose members were appointed by the King and served at his pleasure, sentenced Marshal Michel Ney and the Comte
Charles de la Bédoyère to death for treason, while 250 people were given prison sentences and some others exiled, including
Joseph Fouché,
Lazare Carnot, and
Cambacérès. The surviving "regicides" who had voted for the execution of Louis XVI in 1792 were exiled. The White Terror in the political sphere ended when Louis XVIII disbanded the
Chambre introuvable in 1816, putting an end to the ultra-royalist excesses, as he feared it would provoke a new revolution. == See also ==