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Marie François Sadi Carnot

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Preceded by
  
Jules Grevy

Name
  
Marie Sadi

Grandparents
  
Lazare Carnot

Succeeded by
  
Jean Casimir-Perier

Education
  
Ecole Polytechnique

Preceded by
  
Jules Grevy

Parents
  
Hippolyte Carnot

Succeeded by
  
Jean Casimir-Perier

Role
  
French statesman


Marie Francois Sadi Carnot httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons11

Prime Minister
  
Maurice Rouvier Pierre Tirard Charles Floquet Pierre Tirard Charles de Freycinet Emile Loubet Alexandre Ribot Charles Dupuy Jean Casimir-Perier Charles Dupuy

Died
  
25 June 1894 (aged 56) Lyon, France

Assassinated
  
June 25, 1894, Lyon, France

Uncles
  
Nicolas Leonard Sadi Carnot

Similar People
  
Lazare Carnot, Hippolyte Carnot, Nicolas Leonard Sadi Car

Marie fran ois sadi carnot


Marie François Sadi Carnot ([maʁi fʁɑ̃swa sadi kaʁno]; 11 August 1837 – 25 June 1894) was a French statesman and the fifth president of the Third Republic. He served as the President of France from 1887 until his assassination in 1894.

Contents

Marie François Sadi Carnot | Wikipedia audio article


Early life

Marie Francois Sadi Carnot Biografia di Marie Franois Sadi Carnot Biografieonlineit

Marie was the son of the statesman Hippolyte Carnot and was born in Limoges, Haute-Vienne. His third given name Sadi was in honour of his uncle Nicolas Léonard Sadi Carnot, a pioneer in the study of thermodynamics. Like his uncle, Marie too came to be known as Sadi Carnot. He was educated as a civil engineer, and was a highly distinguished student at both the École Polytechnique and the École des Ponts et Chaussées. After his academic course, he obtained an appointment in the public service. His hereditary republicanism caused the government of national defence to entrust him in 1870 with the task of organizing resistance in the départements of the Eure, Calvados and Seine-Inférieure, and he was made prefect of Seine-Inférieure in January 1871. In the following month he was elected to the French National Assembly by the département Côte-d'Or. In August 1878 he was appointed secretary to the minister of public works. He became minister in September 1880 and again in April 1885, moving almost immediately to the ministry of finance, which post he held under both the Ferry and the Freycinet administrations until December 1886.

Presidency

Marie Francois Sadi Carnot Sadi Carnot president of France Britannicacom

When the Daniel Wilson scandals occasioned the downfall of Jules Grévy in December 1887, Carnot's reputation for integrity made him a candidate for the presidency, and he obtained the support of Georges Clemenceau and many others, so that he was elected by 616 votes out of 827. He assumed office at a critical period, when the republic was all but openly attacked by General Boulanger.

President Carnot's ostensible part during this agitation was confined to augmenting his popularity by well-timed appearances on public occasions, which gained credit for the presidency and the republic. When, early in 1889, Boulanger was finally driven into exile, it fell to Carnot to appear as head of the state on two occasions of special interest, the celebration of the centenary of the French Revolution in 1889 and the opening of the Paris Exhibition of the same year. The success of both was regarded as a popular ratification of the republic, and though continually harassed by the formation and dissolution of ephemeral ministries, by socialist outbreaks, and the beginnings of anti-Semitism, Carnot had only one serious crisis to surmount, the Panama scandals of 1892, which, if they greatly damaged the prestige of the state, increased the respect felt for its head, against whose integrity none could breathe a word. He was in favour of the Franco-Russian Alliance, and received the Order of St Andrew from Alexander III.

Death

Carnot was reaching the zenith of his popularity, when, on 24 June 1894, after delivering at a public banquet at Lyon a speech in which he appeared to imply that he would not seek re-election, he was stabbed by an Italian anarchist named Sante Geronimo Caserio. Carnot died shortly after midnight on 25 June. The stabbing aroused widespread horror and grief, and the president was honoured with an elaborate funeral ceremony in the Panthéon on 1 July 1894.

Caserio called the assassination a political act, and was executed on 16 August 1894.

References

Marie François Sadi Carnot Wikipedia