Jules Anglès

Jules Jean Baptiste, comte Anglès (28 July 1778 – 16 January 1828) was a French politician who was Minister of Police for a short period in 1814.

His father was Jean-François Anglès (1736-1828), a lawyer and adviser to the Grand Chamber of the Parliament of Grenoble, who was arrested during the French Revolution and spent 18 months in jail before being released on 9 Thermidor (27 July 1794).

[2] After the Ministry of the General Police was dissolved in May 1814 by the first Bourbon Restoration, Anglès was assigned to the Council of State.

On 20 March 1815 he followed King Louis XVIII of France to Ghent, where he edited the Moniteur Royaliste.

[2] Anglès died in his Chateau de Cornillon, Mably, Loire, on 16 January 1828, aged 49.