Online Encyclopedia

PIERRE EMANUEL TIRARD (1827–1893)

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 1006 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PIERRE EMANUEL TIRARD (1827–1893)  , French politician, was born of French parents at Geneva on the 27th of September 1827, and, after studying in his native
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town, became a
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civil engineer . After five years of government service he resigned to become a jewel merchant . His determined opposition to the
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empire, culminating in 1869 in a
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campaign in favour of the radical
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candidate opposed to 011ivier, was rewarded by his election as mayor of the firth arrondissement of Paris and as deputy for the Seine . Nominated a member of the Commune, he protested against the tyranny of the central committee, and escaped from Paris to resume his place among the extreme
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Left in the
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National Assembly at
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Versailles . In 1876 he was returned for the 1st arrondissement of Paris to the Chamber of Deputies, and was re-elected next
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year . He specially de-voted himself to
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finance, being for a short time president of the customs commission before his appointment as minister of agriculture and commerce in March 1879 in the Waddington
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cabinet . He held the same portfolio in the first Freycinet
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ministry (1879–1880) and in the Jules Ferry cabinet (1880–1881) . He was minister of commerce in Freycinet's second cabinet (1882), of finance under E . Duclerc (1882–1883), and under A . Fallieres (1883), retaining the same office in the second Jules Ferry ministry (1883–1885) . When Carnot became president of the Republic in 1887 he asked Tirard to form a ministry . He had to
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deal with the Wilson
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scandal which had led to President Grevy's downfall, and with the revisionist agitation of General Boulanger .

His refusal to proceed to the revision of the constitution of 1875 led to his defeat on the 3oth of March 1888 . He returned to

power next year, and decided to bring Boulanger and his chief supporters before the High Court, but the general's
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flight effectively settled the question . He also arrested Philip, duke of Orleans, who had visited France in disguise . He resigned office on the 15th of March 1890 on the question of the Franco
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Turkish commercial treaty . He re-placed M . Rouvier in the Ribot cabinet (1892–1893) as minister of finance, and died in Paris on the 4th of November 1893 .

End of Article: PIERRE EMANUEL TIRARD (1827–1893)
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