Henri Guillemin always said he died "between two whores" as "after all, one dies as one can". Here's an extract from an online book:
"In early 1791, he conveniently died at age forty two. Strangely, six months before passing on, his life had taken a strange twist when his normal, frenzied daily pace accelerated noticeably. He, who already had a gargantuan appetite for life, doubled the portions. Today, in trying to explain his behavior, cocaine or speed would come to mind, but those drugs were unknown in his day. Suffice to say, he behaved like a racing motor about to disintegrate. He often complained of stomach pains and only a potion administered by his physician and friend, Cabanis, succeeded in calming him. This larger-than-life individual who had never been sick a day in his life died mysteriously of unknown causes in the prime of life.
Vicq d'Azyr, a highly respected man of science, performed an official autopsy on Mirabeau and declared that the cause of death was "not incompatible with teh ingestion of a violent remedy or poison." In spite of the eminent doctor's conclusion, it was stated officially that Mirabeau died of natural causes. The whole nation was saddened by Mirabeau's death and 300,000 people accompanied his mortal remains to the Panthéon where he was interred as a hero." -Gilles Andre Mousseau, Fed-ility, 2011
Anyway, he died April 2, 1791, in Paris. Wikipedia tells that he had pericardisis, which could have been due to poisoning; before he died he simply wrote the word "dormir", which means "to sleep". His remains were removed from the Panthéon and replaced with Marat's in 1794, after the sticky business of the iron chest.
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Comte Mede de Sivrac was a French inventor who came up with the celerifere bicycle in 1790. This particular bicycle had no pedals, no steering, and had four tires.
He (Charles X, comte D'Artois) was married to Marie-Thérèse de Savoie.
The first Bourbon restoration was in 1814, after Napoleon got exiled. Though, these Kings had no actual power. The "monarchy" might have been restored for a wile, but only in name. It was a constitutional monarchy. Louis Stanislas Xavier de France (Comte de Provence) pronounced himself King in 1814. He was the brother of Louis XVI who had been killed during the revolution, and of whom he had always been envious. After him, in 1830, his other brother Charles-Philippe de France (Comte D'Artois) was King.
Andrew Jackson was a Prisoner of War as a very young man and Winston Churchill became a prisoner during the Boer War at the age of 25.John McCain was a POW during Vietnam as well, and he's given several very powerful and detailed interviews of his experience. It's definitely worth investigating if you're looking for more information.
he did not die he vanished and now knew where he went but he is oversly dead