Online Encyclopedia

CHARLES GANILH (1758-1836)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 452 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHARLES GANILH (1758-1836)  , French economist and politician, was born at Allanche in
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Cantal on the 6th of
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January 1758 . He was educated for the profession of law and practised as avocat . During the troubled period which culminated in the taking of the Bastille on the 14th of
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July 1789, he came prominently forward in public affairs, and was one of the seven members of the permanent Committee of Public Safety which sat at the hotel de ville . He was imprisoned during the Reign of Terror, and was only released by the
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counter-revolution of the 9th Thermidor . During the first consulate he was called to the tribunate, but was excluded in 1802 . In 1815 he was elected deputy for Cantal, and finally
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left the Chamber on its dissolution in 1823 . He died in 1836 . Ganilh is best known as the most vigorous defender of the mercantile school in opposition to the views of Adam Smith and the
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English economists . His
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works, though interesting from the clearness and precision with which these
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peculiar opinions are presented, do not now possess much value for the student of
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political
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economy . He wrote Essai politique sur le revenue
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des peuples de l'antiquite, du moyen age, &c . (1808); Des systemes d'economie politique (1809); Theorie d'economie politique (1815); Dictionnaire analytique de l'economie politique (1826) .

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