Jean-Joseph Sue (1760–1830)

He also taught anatomy at the Atheneum and the Royal School of surgery, and delivered his care to a thriving clientele in its own cabinet.

[3] Sue had conducted several experiments on animals following the controversial and sensational beheading of Charlotte Corday to prove his point.

[4] The physiologist Pierre Jean George Cabanis was not convinced that Sue's theory was correct.

Jean Joseph Sue II was married three times and had a total of five children.

Eugène and his sister Victorine were born from his second marriage with Marie Sophie Tison de Reilly or Derilly in 1803.

Adèle Romany , Jean-Joseph Sue and his son , circa 1810