Paul Deschanel

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Paul Deschanel bigraphy, stories - President of France

Paul Deschanel : biography

13 February 1855 – 28 April 1922

Paul Eugène Louis Deschanel ( 13 February 1855, Schaerbeek – 28 April 1922) was a French statesman. He served as President of France from 18 February 1920 to 21 September 1920.

Works

He was elected a member of the Académie française in 1899, his most notable works being:

  • Orateurs et hommes d’état – Frédéric II – M. de Bismarck – Fox et Pitt – Lord Grey – Talleyrand – Berryer – Gladstone, Calmann Lévy, Paris, 1889
  • Figures de femmes (1889)
  • La Décentralisation (1895), La Question sociale (1898).

Biography

Paul Deschanel, the son of Émile Deschanel (1819–1904), professor at the Collège de France and senator, was born at Brussels, where his father was living in exile (1851–1859), owing to his opposition to Napoleon III. He is one of only two French Presidents (the other is Valéry Giscard d’Estaing) who were born outside France (Deschanel in Belgium, Giscard in Koblenz, Germany).

Education

His addresses at Marseille on 26 October 1896, at Carmaux on 27 December 1896, and at Roubaix on 10 April 1897, were triumphs of clear and eloquent exposition of the political and social aims of the Progressist party.

Presidency

In June 1898, he was elected president of the chamber, and was re-elected in 1901, but rejected in 1902. Nevertheless he came forward brilliantly in 1904 and 1905 as a supporter of the law on the separation of church and state. He returned to his former position in 1912, serving until he was elected President of France on 17 January 1920.

Deschanel aspired to a much more active role as president than had been de rigueur under the Third Republic; but, for reasons of his own mental health, was unable to put his ideas to the test.

As president, his eccentric behaviour caused some consternation; on one occasion, after a delegation of schoolgirls had presented him with a bouquet, he tossed the flowers back at them one by one. On another occasion he received the British Ambassador to France wearing only the ceremonial decorations of his office.http://qjmed.oxfordjournals.org/content/96/5/325.full It all culminated when, late one night, 24 May 1920, he fell out of a large window of the presidential train near Montargis after taking some sleeping pills and was found wandering in his nightshirt by a platelayer, who took him to the nearest level-crossing keeper’s cottage. Soon afterwards, Deschanel walked out of a state meeting, straight into a lake, fully clothed. His resignation was offered on 21 September 1920, and he was placed in an institution. Nevertheless, he was narrowly elected to the senate in January 1921, serving until his death.

He was the only French head of state during whose term in office no persons in France were executed (the death penalty was abolished in 1981 with support of President François Mitterrand). Deschanel himself was a longtime death penalty opponent.