François-Jean-Hyacinthe Feutrier (3 April 1785 – 27 June 1830) was a French Catholic priest who became Bishop of Beauvais.
He caused a storm of protest from the other bishops in France when he signed an ordinance aimed at restricting the influence of the church in schools.
The cardinal also helped him to become a member of the council convoked in Paris by Napoleon to settle disputes between the French government and Pope Pius VII.
He was soon made honorary canon of the royal chapel of Saint-Denis, then curé of La Madeleine, Paris.
[2] Mgr Denis-Luc Frayssinous, who had been Minister of Public Education and Religious Affairs in the Ministry of Jean-Baptiste de Martignac, was dismissed in 1828.
[4] On 16 June 1828 two ordinances by King Charles X of France were issued, one countersigned by Joseph-Marie, comte Portalis and the other by Feutrier.
The other ordinance required all teachers to sign a document in which they declared that they did not belong to any unauthorized religious congregation.