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MICHEL CHEVALIER (1806-1879)

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 113 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MICHEL CHEVALIER (1806-1879)  , French economist, was born at
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Limoges on the 13th of
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January 18o6 . In his early manhood, while employed as an engineer, he became a convert to the theories of Saint Simon; these he ardently advocated in the Globe, the
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organ of the Saint Simonians, which he edited until his arrest in 1832 on a charge of outraging public morality by its publication . He was sentenced to a
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year's imprisonment, but was released in six months through the intervention of
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Thiers, who sent him on a
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special
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mission to the
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United States to study the question of
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land and
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water transport . In 1836 he published, in two volumes, the letters he wrote from
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America to the Journal
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des debats . These attracted so much attention that he was sent in the same year on an economic mission to England, which resulted in his publication (in 1838) of Des interets materiels de la France . The success of this made his position secure, and in 1840 he was appointed professor of
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political
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economy in the College de France . He sat for a short time (1845–1846) as a member of the Chamber of Deputies, but lost his seat owing to his enthusiastic adoption of the principles of
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free trade . Under
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Napoleon III. he was restored to the position of which the revolution of 1848 had temporarily deprived him . In 185o he became a member of the Institute, and in the following year published an important
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work in favour of free trade, under the title of Examen du systeme commercial connu sous le nom de systeme protecteur . His chief public triumph was the important
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part he played in bringing about the conclusion of the commercial treaty between France and
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Great Britain in ,86o . Previously to this he had served, in 1855, upon the commission for organizing the
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Exhibition of 1855, and his services there led to his forming one of the French
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jury of awards in the
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London Exhibition of 1862 . He was created a member of the Senate in 186o, and continued for some years to take an active part in its discussions .

He retired from public

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life in 1870, but was unceasingly industrious with his pen . He became
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grand officer of the Legion of Honour in 1861, and during the later years of his life received from many quarters public recognition of his eminence as a political economist . He died at his chateau near
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Montpellier (
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Herault) on the 28th of November 1879 . Many of his
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works have been translated into
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English and other
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languages . Besides those already mentioned the more important are: Cours d'economie politique (1842–1850); Essais de politique industrielle (1843); De la baisse probable d'or (1859, translated into English by Cobden, On the Probable Fall of the Value of Gold, Manchester, 1859); L'Expedition du Mexique (1862); Introduction aux rapports du jury international (1868) .

End of Article: MICHEL CHEVALIER (1806-1879)
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