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See also: born at See also: Valenciennes on the 23rd of See also: December 1812
.
Devoting himself to a See also: literary career, he became in 1840 professor at the Ecole Normale Superieure under the patronage of Guizot, whom he succeeded as professor at the Faculte See also: des Lettres in 1846
.
His See also: works on See also: slavery in the French colonies (1847) and on slavery in antiquity (1848; new edition in 3 vols., 1879) led to his being placed, after the Revolution of 1848, on a commission for the regulation of labour in the French colonial possessions, and in See also: November 1849 he was elected to the Legislative See also: Assembly by the department of the See also: Nord
.
He resigned in 185o, disapproving of the measure for the restriction of the See also: suffrage adopted by the majority
.
In the same See also: year he was elected a member of the Academie des Inscriptions, of which he became perpetual secretary in 1873
.
Under the See also: empire he withdrew altogether from See also: political See also: life, and occupied himself entirely with his duties as a professor of See also: history and with See also: historical writings, the most See also: original of which is a biography, See also: Richard II, See also: episode de la rivalite de la See also: France et de l'Angleterre (2 vols., 1864)
.
Although remaining a re-publican, he exhibited decided clerical leanings in his Jeanne d'Arc (2 vols., 186o; 2nd ed., 1875); La See also: Vie de Notre Seigneur Jesus (x865)—a reply to the Vie de Jesus of E
.
See also: Renan; and See also: Saint See also: Louis et son temps (1871; 4th ed., 1892), which still ranks among hagiographical works
.
Returning to politics after the Franco-
See also: German War, Wallon was re-elected by the department of the Nord in 1871, took an active See also: part in the proceedings of the Assembly, and finally immortalized himself by carrying his proposition for the establishment of the Republic with a president elected for seven years, and then eligible for re-election, which, after violent debates, was adopted by the Assembly on the 3oth of See also: January 1875
.
" Ma proposition," he declared, " ne proclame pas la Republique, elle la fait." Upon the definitive establishment of the Republic, Wallon became See also: Minister of Public Instruction, and effected many useful reforms, but his views were too conservative for the majority of the Assembly, and he retired in May 1876
.
He had been chosen a life senator in December 1875
.
Returning to his historical studies, Wallon produced four works of See also: great importance, though less from his part in them as author than from the documents which accompanied them: La Terreur (1873); Histoire du tribunal
revolutionnaire de See also: Paris avec le journal de ses actes (6 vols., 1880-1882); La Revolution du 31 See also: mai et le federalisme en 1793 (2 vols., 1886); See also: Les Representants du See also: people en See also: mission et la See also: justice revolutionnaire dans les departements (5 vols., 1880-1890)
.
Besides these he published a number of articles in the Journal des savants; for many years he wrote the history of the Academie des Inscriptions in the collection of See also: Memoirs of this See also: Academy, and he composed obituary notices of his colleagues, which were inserted in the Bulletin
.
He died at Paris on the 13th of November 1904
.
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