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JULES See also: born at See also: Lyons on the 21st of See also: March 1809, and began his career as an advocate
.
From the
See also: time of the revolution of 183o he openly declared himself a republican, and in See also: political trials he seized the opportunity to express his opinions
.
After the revolution of 1848 he was elected deputy for Lyons to the Constituent See also: Assembly, where he sat among the moderate republicans, voting against the socialists
.
When See also: Louis
See also: Napoleon was elected President of See also: France, Favre made himself conspicuous by his opposition, and on the 2nd of See also: December 1851 he tried with Victor Hugo and others to organize an armed resistance in the streets of See also: Paris
.
After the coup d'etat he withdrew from politics, resumed his profession, and distinguished himself by his defence of Felice See also: Orsini, the perpetrator of the attack against the See also: life of Napoleon III
.
In 1858 he was elected deputy for Paris, and was one of the " Five " who gave the See also: signal for the republican opposition to the See also: Empire
.
In 1863 he became the See also: head of his party, and delivered a number of addresses denouncing the Mexican expedition and the occupation of See also: Rome
.
These addresses, eloquent, clear and incisive, won him a seat in the French See also: Academy in 1867
.
With See also: Thiers he opposed the declaration of war against Prussia in 1870, and at the See also: news of the defeat of Napoleon III. at See also: Sedan he demanded from the Legislative Assembly the deposition of the emperor
.
In the See also: government of See also: National Defence he became See also: vice-president under General See also: Trochu, and See also: minister of See also: foreign affairs, with the onerous task of negotiating See also: peace with victorious See also: Germany
.
He proved to be less adroit as a diplomat than he had been as an orator, and committed several irreparable blunders
.
His famous statement on the 6th of See also: September 187o that he " would not yield to Germany an inch of territory nor a single See also: stone of the fortresses " was a piece of oratory which Bismarck met on the 19th by his declaration to Favre that the cession of
See also: Alsace and of See also: Lorraine was the indispensable condition of peace
.
He also made the See also: mistake of not having an assembly elected which would have more See also: regular See also: powers than the government of National Defence, and of opposing the removal of the government from Paris during the siege
.
In the peace negotiations he allowed Bismarck to get the better of him, and arranged for the armistice of the 28th of See also: June 1871 without knowing, the situation of the armies, and without consulting the government at See also: Bordeaux
.
By a See also: grave oversight he neglected to inform See also: Gambetta that the army of the See also: East (8o,000 men) was not included in the armistice, and it was thus obliged to retreat to neutral territory
.
He gave no proof what-ever of See also: diplomatic skill in the negotiations for the treaty of See also: Frank-fort, and it was Bismarck who imposed all the conditions
.
He withdrew from the See also: ministry, discredited, on the 2nd of See also: August 1871, but remained in the chamber of deputies
.
Elected senator on the 3oth of See also: January 1876, he continued to support the government of the republic against the reactionary opposition, until his See also: death on the 20th of January 1880
.
His See also: works include many speeches and addresses, notably La Liberte de la Presse (1849), Defense de F
.
Orsini (1866), Discours de reception a l'Academie fran(aise (1868), Discours sur la liberle interieure (1869)
.
In Le Gouvernement de la Defense Nationale, 3 vols., 1871-1875, he explained his role in 1870-1871
.
After his death his See also: family published his speeches in 8 volurhes
.
See G
.
Hanotaux, Histoire de la France contenporaine (1903, &c.) ; also E
.
Benoit- See also: Levy, Jules Favre (1884)
.
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