Hébertists
The Hébertists (French: Hébertistes), also known as the Exaggerators (Exagérés), were a radical revolutionary faction active during the French Revolution's Reign of Terror from 1793 to 1794, led by journalist Jacques René Hébert and representing the interests of Parisian sans-culottes through dominance in the Cordeliers Club and Paris Commune.[1][2]
They advocated for intensified application of the Terror against perceived enemies, including the aristocracy, clergy, and moderates, while promoting dechristianization efforts such as the establishment of the Cult of Reason, church vandalism, and the adoption of the French Republican calendar to eradicate religious influence.[1]
Economically, the group demanded strict price maximums, forced requisitions from hoarders and peasants, widespread use of assignats, and mobilization measures like the levée en masse for total war against foreign coalitions, viewing terror as both a political and economic instrument to address scarcity and subversion.[2]
Their ultra-patriotic stance clashed with the more moderate Indulgents led by Georges Danton and the Jacobin leadership under Maximilien Robespierre, who accused them of atheism, anarchy, and plotting with foreign powers, leading to their arrest on 14 Germinal Year II (4 March 1794) following failed insurrection plans and subsequent execution by guillotine on 24 March 1794 alongside eighteen associates, including Pierre-Gaspard Chaumette and François-Nicolas Vincent.[1][2]