Jean-Marc Mousson | |
---|---|
1st Chancellor of Switzerland | |
In office 1803–1833 |
|
Preceded by | Post Created |
Succeeded by | Karl Nikolaus von Flüe AmRhyn |
Personal details | |
Born |
Morges, Switzerland |
17 February 1776
Died | 21 June 1861 Zurich, Switzerland |
(aged 85)
Alma mater | University of Tübingen |
Jean-Marc Samuel Isaac Mousson (born 17 February 1776 in Morges, Switzerland) was a Swiss politician and civil servant. He was the first Chancellor of Switzerland from 1803 to 1830.
Mousson was the descendent of Huguenot refugees from Le Mas-d'Azil in the French County of Foix who took up refuge on the Vaud side of Lake Geneva, in Morges following the revocation of the Edict of Nantes by Louis XIV. His father was a reformed pastor. Mousson studied law at the Academy in Lausanne. He continued his studies at the University of Tübingen, where his obtained his doctorate in 1796. After the French invasion of Switzerland and the establishment of the Helvetic Republic, he took in January 1798 the position of deputy of Bursins in provisional meeting of the "Lemanischen Republic" in part and was its secretary.
The Directorate of the Helvetic Republic appointed Mousson in June 1798 to the post of Secretary-General. In 1803, he was appointed private secretary to Landammann Louis d'Affry. That same year, at only 27 years of age, he was elected to the Diet Chancellor of the Confederation; he was the first and youngest in Switzerland to reach this high office. Mousson was instrumental in the construction of the Federal Chancellery, the oldest permanent federal agency in Switzerland. He remained in that position until his retirement in 1830, successively passing through the period of the Act of Mediation (1803), as well as the Restoration.
From September 1833 to January 1834, he was part of the arbitral tribunal that legally regulated the separation of the canton of Basel. He then retired to Zurich where he continued to participate in federal political debate. During his career, he was appointed honorary citizen of Zurich (1816) and Bern (1821). He was also awarded the Order of St. Stephen of Hungary (1815) by Francis I, Emperor of Austria and the Red Eagle of Prussia (1817) by Friedrich Wilhelm IV, King of Prussia.