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See also: born at St Remi-sur-1'Avre (See also: Eure-et-Loir) on the 11th of See also: December 1826
.
He was the son of a wealthy Englishman who had established a large spinning factory in See also: France and had been naturalized as a French subject
.
After receiving his early See also: education in See also: Paris, he was sent to See also: Rugby, and thence proceeded to Trinity See also: College, Cambridge, where he was second classic and chancellor's medallist, and rowed for the university in the winning boat against See also: Oxford
.
Returning to France, he devoted himself for some years to archaeological research
.
He undertook travels in See also: Asia Minor, See also: Greece and See also: Syria, the fruits of which were published in two Memoires, crowned by the Institute, and in his Melanges de numismatique et de philologie (1861)
.
Except his essay on " The See also: Protestant See also: Church in France," published in 1856 in Cambridge Essays, his remaining
See also: works are likewise archaeological
.
They include the See also: Fasces de l'See also: empire romain, and See also: editions of See also: Diocletian's edict and of Philippe Lebas's Voyage archeologique (1868–1877)
.
He was elected in 1865 a member of the See also: Academic See also: des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres
.
After See also: standing unsuccessfully for the department of the See also: Aisne in 1865 and 1860, Waddington was returned by that constituency at the election of 1871
.
He was See also: minister of public instruction in the See also: short-lived See also: cabinet of the loth of May 1873, and in 1876,having been elected senator for the Aisne, he was again entrusted by Dufaure with the See also: ministry of public instruction, with which, as a Protestant, he was not permitted to combine the ministry of public worship
.
His most important project, a See also: bill transferring the conferment of degrees to the See also: state, passed the Chamber, but was thrown out by the Senate
.
He continued to hold his office under Jules See also: Simon, with whom he was overthrown on the famous seize See also: mai 1877
.
The See also: triumph of the republicans at the general election brought him back to power in the following December as minister of See also: foreign affairs under Dufaure
.
He was one of the French plenipotentiaries at the Berlin Congress
.
The cession of See also: Cyprus to See also: Great Britain was at first denounced by the French See also: newspapers as a great See also: blow to his See also: diplomacy, but he obtained, in a conversation with See also: Lord See also: Salisbury, a promise that Great Britain in return would allow France a See also: free See also: hand in See also: Tunis
Early in 1879 Waddington succeeded Dufaure as See also: prime minister
.
Holding office by sufferance of See also: Gambetta, he halted in an undetermined attitude between the radicals and the reactionaries till the delay of urgent reforms lost him the support of all parties
.
He was forced on the 27th of December to retire from office
.
He refused the offer of the See also: London See also: embassy, and in 1880 was reporter of the committee on the adoption of the scrutin de liste at elections, on which he delivered an adverse See also: judgment
.
In 1883 he accepted the London embassy, which he continued to hold till 1893, showing an exceptional tenacity in defence of his country's interests
.
He died on the 13th of See also: January 1894
.
His wife, an See also: American lady, whose See also: maiden name was Mary A
.
See also: King, wrote some interesting recollections of their
See also: diplomatic experiences—Letters of a Diplomatist's Wife, 1883–1900 (New See also: York, 1903), and See also: Italian Letters (London, 1905)
.
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