What is the personality type of Madame Roland? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Madame Roland from Historical Figures 1700s and what is the personality traits.
Madame Roland personality type is INFJ, in accordance with the Myers and Briggs and in accordance with my real self (INFP) and my persona (INFJ). It is also in accordance with the MBTI type of my father and in accordance with my mother's MBTI type, the only one I've seen.
I'm still working with this, but I'm getting a better understanding of what INFJs do. We may be quiet, we may be shy, we may seem shy, we may seem reserved, we may seem introverted, we may seem quiet. But when we find our own unique voice and when we find our own unique way to express our individual and collective wisdom and vision and beliefs and ideas and thoughts and principles and ideals and ethics and morals and ideals we're INFPs. When we find our own unique way to express ourselves we're INFJs.
A lot of INFJs go wrong when they don't take time to figure out their own unique way to express themselves. This is not something that happens over night. It takes time. And it takes practice. And it is a learning process. It's all about finding your way. Don't give up if you don't see results the first day.
Marie-Jeanne 'Manon' Roland de la Platière (Paris, March 17, 1754 – Paris, November 8, 1793), born Marie-Jeanne Phlipon, and best known under the name Madame Roland, was a French revolutionary, salonnière and writer.
Initially she led a quiet and unremarkable life as a provincial intellectual with her husband, the economist Jean-Marie Roland de la Platière. She became interested in politics only when the French Revolution broke out in 1789. She spent the first years of the revolution in Lyon, where her husband was elected to the city council. During this period she developed a network of contacts with politicians and journalists; her reports on developments in Lyon were published in national revolutionary newspapers.