Jean-Charles Beauvilliers

Jean-Charles Beauvilliers ( Ovancian pronunciation, Tavadal: 𐐅𐐍‧𐐘𐐂𐐌 𐐚𐐜𐐒𐐉𐐌𐐇𐐦, Glet: ߟߋߓ-ߕߋ߰ߦ ߒߐߖߎ߽ߧߎ) is a Tavaludan educator and politician serving as one of the Samnasîfaleke on the Tavaludan High Council. He was elected to and has held his seat since 2018. He is a member of the Party for the Representation of Immigrants, serving in joint affiliation with the New Path Party.

Beauvilliers has served in government for some time and when I come up with names for the positions they'll go here.

Early life and education
Jean-Charles Beauvilliers was born into a Chezzetcooker family in Pobonocou, L'Île-aux-Marins, Chezzetcook, along with an identical twin brother, Steven. He is the son of Mary-Sue Lee (née Ableton), an Anglo-Chezzetcooker seamstress, and Aurélien Beauvilliers, a.

He spent the majority of his early life in Pobonocou, and was raised speaking both and  at home, due to his diverse parentage.

Having grown up during Chezzetcook's shift in focus towards Avalonian cooperation, Jean-Charles developed an early interest in the continent, especially in the Tavalonian region. He said that he often asked his father for stories about or from Tavalonia, and that after receiving a book of Tavaludan myths and stories as a gift for his 14th birthday, he developed a "special passion" for the nation's culture that continued into his adulthood. When his father took short trips to the continent in the summers, Jean-Charles would often join him.

Beauvilliers' father worked as a government social worker, often having been branded an "idealist" by his friends and co-workers, taking the lead in many social assistance programs in Pobonocou and, eventually, throughout the L'Île-aux-Marins province. Jean-Charles said that his father's work and "passion of ideals" had a large influence on his persona growing up, and inspired him to pursue the public good, although other commentators have noted that his father's shooting death at the hands of one of the recipients of his social programs when Jean-Charles was 17 "tempered the early flames of [Jean-Charles'] idealism."

In 1989, Jean-Charles enrolled at Pobonocou Regional University, where he studied and, graduating with   in the subjects in 1994, before taking a 5-year gap in his education to join the Chezzetcooker Marine Nationale in order to fulfill his national service requirements for citizenship.

After moving to Tavaluda in 2002, Beauvilliers would study at the Manîtelek University of Social Sciences in Bêlîkesîtagak, Tavaluda, receiving a  in 2004, where he would teach until 2009.

Personal life
Jean-Charles is married to Sa Xas̄to-Beauvilliers. They have two children.

Jean-Charles has a single, identical twin brother, named Steven. Steven is executive director of Partnerships for Education in Pobonocou (Ovancian: Partenariats pour l'éducation à Pobonocou), an interagency educational partnership at Pobonocou Regional University.

Aside from Ovancian, Anglic, and Tavadal, Beauvilliers speaks fluent Glet, Badzevali, and some Gada and Artimijan Samot. During a visit to Elega in Argata in January 2020, Beauvilliers stated in a meeting with Chancellor Savas Każeg that it is easier for him to comprehend Gada than speak, which forces him to speak to Gada speakers through a translator "so as not to say anything wrong".