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DOCTRINAIRES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 367 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DOCTRINAIRES  , the name given to the leaders of the moderate and constitutional Royalists in

France after the second restoration of Louis XVIII. in 1815 . The name, as has often been the case with party designations, was at first given in derision, and by an enemy . In 1816 the Nain jaune refugie, a French paper published at Brussels by Bonapartist and Liberal exiles, began to speak of M . Royer-Collard as the " doctrinaire " and also as le pere Royer-Collard de la
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doctrine chretienne . The peres de la doctrine chretienne, popularly known as the " doctrinaires," were a French religious order founded in 1592 by Cesar de Bus . The choice of a
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nickname for M . Royer-Collard does credit to the journalistic insight of the contributors to the Nain jaune refugie, for he was emphatically a man who made it his business to preach a doctrine and an orthodoxy . The popularity of the name and its rapid extension to M . Royer-Collard's colleagues is the sufficient proof that it was well chosen and had more than a
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personal application . These colleagues came, it is true, from various quarters . The duc de Richelieu and M. de Serre had been Royalist emigres during the revolutionary and imperial. epoch . MM .

Royer-Collard himself, Latne, and

Maine de Biran had sat in the revolutionary Assemblies . MM . Pasquier, Beugnot, de Barante, Cuvier, Mounier, Guizot and
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Decazes had been imperial officials . But they were closely
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united by
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political principle, and also by a certain similarity of method . Some of them, notably Guizot and Maine de Biran,were theorists and commentators on the principles of government . M. de Barante was an eminent man of letters . All were noted for the doctrinal coherence of their principles and the dialectical rigidity of their arguments . The
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object of the party as defined by M . (afterwards the due) Decazes was to " nationalize the monarchy and to royalize France." The means by which they hoped to attain this end were a loyal application of the charter granted by Louis XVIII., and the steady co-operation of the king with the moderate Royalists to defeat the extreme party known as the Ultras, who aimed at the
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complete undoing of the political and social
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work of the Revolution . The Doctrinaires were ready to allow the king a large discretion in the choice of his ministers and the direction of
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national policy . They refused to allow that ministers should be removed in obedience to a hostile
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vote in the chamber . Their ideal in fact was a combination of a king who frankly accepted the resultsof the Revolution, and who governed in a liberal spirit, with the advice of a chamber elected by a very limited constituency, in which men of
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property and
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education formed, if not the whole, at least the very
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great majority of the voters .

Their views were set forth by Guizot in 1816 in his

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treatise Du gouvernement representatif et de l'etat actuel de la France . The chief
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organs of the party in the press were the
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Independent, renamed the Constitutionnel in 1817, and the Journal
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des debats . The supporters of the Doctrinaires in. the country were chiefly ex-officials of the
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empire,—who believed in the necessity for monarchical government but had a lively memory of
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Napoleon's tyranny and a no less lively hatred of the ancien regime,--merchants, manufacturers and members of the liberal professions, particularly the lawyers . The
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history of the Doctrinaires as a
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separate political party began in 1816 and ended in 183o . In 1816 they obtained the co-operation of Louis XVIII., who had been frightened by the violence of the Ultras in the Chambre introuvable of 1815 . In 183o they were destroyed by Charles X. when he took the Ultra prince de
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Polignac as his minister and entered on the conflict with Liberalism in France which ended in his overthrow . During the revolution of 183o the Doctrinaires became absorbed in the
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Orleanists, from whom they had never been separated on any ground of principle (see FRANCE: History) . The word " doctrinaire " has become naturalized in
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English terminology, as applied, in a slightly contemptuous sense, to a theorist, as distinguished from a
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practical man of affairs . See Duvergier de Hauranne, Histoire du gouvernement parlementaire en France (Paris, 1857-1871), vol. iii .

End of Article: DOCTRINAIRES
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