Charles-François Lebrun (born March 19, 1739, Saint-Sauveur-Lendelin, France—died June 16, 1824, Saint-Mesmes) was a French politician who served as third consul from 1799 to 1804, as treasurer of Napoleon’s empire from 1804 to 1814, and as governor-general of Holland from 1811 to 1813.
While he was a lawyer in Paris, Lebrun served as royal censor in 1766, and two years later he became inspector general of the crown lands. As secretary and protégé of the chancellor René-Nicolas de Maupeou, he assisted him in the judicial reforms of 1771, but after Maupeou fell out of favour, Lebrun occupied himself translating Gerusalemme liberata (“Jerusalem Delivered”), by the 16th-century Italian poet Torquato Tasso, and parts of the Iliad.
During the sessions of the Estates-General of 1789, Lebrun was deputy for the Third Estate of Dourdan, and after the Revolution he continued to represent Dourdan in the National Assembly. A moderate liberal, he was imprisoned by the left-wing Jacobins; but after the coup d’état of 9 Thermidor (July 27, 1794), which brought the Terror to an end, he represented the département of Seine-et-Oise in the Conseil des Anciens, one of the legislative chambers of the Directory. After Napoleon’s coup d’état of 18 Brumaire (Nov. 9, 1799), Lebrun served as third consul, selected by Napoleon because his royalist sympathies would satisfy the conservatives. At the proclamation of the empire in May 1804, he was named prince et archetrésorier and instituted the Cours de Comptes, which became an important institution in French financial administration. From 1805 to 1806 he supervised the integration of Liguria into the French empire; although he disapproved of Napoleon’s aristocracy, he reluctantly accepted the title Duke de Plaisance (Piacenza) in 1808. As governor-general of Holland, Lebrun ruled wisely and moderately, earning the title “le bon Stadhouder.”
After Napoleon’s abdication, Louis XVIII made him a peer of France. During the Hundred Days, however, after Napoleon returned from exile in Elba, Lebrun accepted the post of grand master of the University of Paris and was therefore excluded from the peerage after the return of the Bourbons in 1815. He was not reinstated until 1819. His Memoires were published posthumously in 1829.