• Thumbnail for Léon Faucher
    Léonard Joseph (Léon) Faucher (French: [leɔ̃ foʃe]; 8 September 1803 – 14 December 1854) was a French politician and economist. Faucher was born at Limoges...
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  • Faucher may refer to: Calvin Faucher (born 1995), American baseball pitcher Françoise Faucher (born 1929), Canadian actress Léon Faucher (1803–1854), French...
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  • Thumbnail for Cabinet of Léon Faucher
    The Cabinet of Léon Faucher, in which Léon Faucher was the leading minister, was formed on 10 April 1851 by President Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte. It followed...
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  • Prime Minister before election Léon Faucher Party of Order Subsequent Prime Minister François-Xavier de Casabianca Bonapartists...
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  • Thumbnail for List of prime ministers of France
    by Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte) • 24 January 1851 10 April 1851 Vacant 6 Léon Faucher (1803–1854) • 10 April 1851 26 October 1851 Party of Order Position vacant...
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  • Dufaure 13 October 1848 20 December 1848 Léon de Malleville 20 December 1848 29 December 1848 Léon Faucher 29 December 1848 2 June 1849 Jules Armand...
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  • Thumbnail for French Second Republic
    Prime Minister   • 1848 (first) Jacques-Charles Dupont • 1851 (last) Léon Faucher Legislature National Assembly History   • French Revolution 23 February...
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  • Thumbnail for Napoleon III
    was 7,336,434 votes yes, 1,560,709 votes no, and 1,900,000 abstentions. Léon Gambetta, the leader of the republican opposition, wrote in despair, "We...
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  • Lucas, Louis-Mathurin Moreau-Christophe, and Léon Faucher. In his book House of Young Prisoners, Faucher prescribed "strict discipline, exact rules, surveillance...
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  • President Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte after the dismissal of the Cabinet of Léon Faucher. It remained in place until the coup of 2 December 1851, when it was...
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  • Thumbnail for First cabinet of Odilon Barrot
    On 29 December 1848, Léon Faucher substituted Léon de Maleville as Interior Minister; Théobald de Lacrosse substituted Faucher as Public Works Minister;...
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  • Bonapartists, and had no president. It was replaced by the Cabinet of Léon Faucher on 10 April 1851. The ministers were: Gabriel-Robez, p. 72. Recueil général...
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  • Thumbnail for Jacques Louis Randon
    v t e Cabinet of Léon Faucher (10 April - 26 October 1851) Under the Presidency of Louis Napoleon Interior Léon Faucher Justice Eugène Rouher Foreign Affairs...
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  • Thumbnail for Eugène Rouher
    the occasion (21 May 1872) of violent attacks by Audiffret-Pasquier and Léon Gambetta. In the 1876 legislative elections for the Bastia constituency Rouher...
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  • Thumbnail for Alphonse Henri d'Hautpoul
    President Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte Preceded by Odilon Barrot Succeeded by Léon Faucher Personal details Born (1789-01-04)4 January 1789 Versailles, France Died...
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  • Thumbnail for Léon Blum
    related to Léon Blum. Leon Blum Archive at marxists.org Maison de Léon et Jeanne Blum Cercle Léon Blum (in French) Newspaper clippings about Léon Blum in...
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  • Thumbnail for Achille Fould
    on 17 November 1800 in Paris, the third son of French Jewish banker Beer Léon Fould and Charlotte née Brullen. In 1823 he married Henriette (Harriet) Goldschmidt...
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  • Thumbnail for Louis Buffet
    – Minister of Foreign Affairs Ernest Courtot de Cissey – Minister of War Léon Say – Minister of Finance Jules Armand Dufaure – Minister of Justice Louis...
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  • Thumbnail for List of state leaders in the 19th century (1851–1900)
    list) – Alphonse Henri, comte d'Hautpoul, Prime minister (1849–1851) Léon Faucher, Prime minister (1851) Second French Empire Emperors (complete list)...
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  • Thumbnail for Émile Ollivier
    rule of Napoleon III between 1852 and 1869. Previous Prime Minister: Léon Faucher (1852) Succeeded by Charles Cousin-Montauban, Comte de Palikao Personal...
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  • Thumbnail for Le Chandelier
    Fortunio and Allan as Jacqueline. In October 1850, the interior minister Léon Faucher had the work banned, a decision confirmed in subsequent seasons. Jacques...
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  • Thumbnail for Léon de Maleville
    and resigned his portfolio on 29 December 1848. He was replaced by Léon Faucher. Maleville was not reelected to his department in the Legislative Assembly...
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  • Thumbnail for Prosper de Chasseloup-Laubat
    v t e Cabinet of Léon Faucher (10 April - 26 October 1851) Under the Presidency of Louis Napoleon Interior Léon Faucher Justice Eugène Rouher Foreign Affairs...
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  • Thumbnail for Ernest Pétin
    Financial troubles and a refusal by French officials (one officer, Léon Faucher, told him that his balloons were unsupportable as the railroads were...
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  • Thumbnail for Marie Jean Pierre Pie Frédéric Dombidau de Crouseilhes
    v t e Cabinet of Léon Faucher (10 April - 26 October 1851) Under the Presidency of Louis Napoleon Interior Léon Faucher Justice Eugène Rouher Foreign Affairs...
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  • Thumbnail for Société d'économie politique
    Jean-Pierre Clément, Hippolyte Dusard, Louis Reybaud, Louis Wolowski, Léon Faucher, Horace Émile Say (1794–1860), son of Jean-Baptiste Say, Théodore Fix...
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  • Thumbnail for Léon Gambetta
    Léon Gambetta (French: [leɔ̃ ɡɑ̃bɛta]; 2 April 1838 – 31 December 1882) was a French lawyer and republican politician who proclaimed the French Third Republic...
    30 KB (3,464 words) - 00:06, 9 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Jules Baroche
    Berger-Levrault et cie. pp. 654, 685. Retrieved 4 February 2024. Aucoc, Léon (1876). Le Conseil d'état avant et depuis 1789: Ses transformations, ses...
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  • Award (1987) Le Nouvel Économiste "Economist of the Year" (1997) Prix Léon Faucher from the Académie des sciences morales et politiques (2000) Prix du Livre...
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  • Thumbnail for Castlefield
    there were six railway lines connecting the world to Manchester, and Léon Faucher commented that there were 15 or 16 seats of industry that formed this...
    44 KB (5,453 words) - 22:10, 18 June 2024