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Mathias Metternich (8 May 1747 – 13 September 1825) was a German mathematician and professor at the University of Mainz. As a revolutionary, he was active in the Republic of Mainz.
In the Republic of Mainz that supported revolutionary France, he was one of the founding members of the Jacobin Club and at times its president.[8][11] After Mainz was taken by Prussian and other troops after the 1793 Siege of Mainz, Metternich was captured and mistreated, then imprisoned at Ehrenbreitstein Fortress and exiled to France in 1795.[12][13] He worked as an administrator and journalist in French occupied territories, but was captured by imperial German troops again in October 1796, spending time in prison until he was released in April 1797 owing to the Treaty of Leoben.[14]
Later life
In 1798, Metternich returned to Mainz and became a teacher at the Zentralschule, a successor organisation of the university.[12] Until 1800, he also worked in the administration of the départementMont-Tonnerre.[15] He ceased his political activity in the Napoleonic era.[12] In 1808, Metternich married Sophie Friederike Treffz.[15] One of their children was Germain Metternich, who became a participant in the German revolutions of 1848–1849.[12]
Metternich died in Mainz on 13 September 1825.[16]