Last modified: 2018-06-27 by ivan sache
Keywords: casimir-périer |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
Casimir-Périer's standard - Image by Željko Heimer, 27 September 2004
See also:
Jean Casimir-Périer (1847-1907) was Casimir Périer's grandson and
Auguste Casimir-Périer's son.
The banker Jean Casimir-Périer (1777-1832) was an opponent to the
Bourbons during the Restauration and rallied king Louis-Philippe during
the July Monarchy. He was appointed President of the Council [of Ministers] in 1832. Casimir-Périer severely repressed popular
insurrections in Paris and Lyon, and supported Belgium in its fight for
independence from the Netherlands. He died during the big epidemic of
cholera that hit Paris in 1832.
His son Auguste (1811-1876) changed his family name from Périer to
Casimir-Périer in 1874. He supported the first president of the Third
Republic Adolphe Thiers and was Minister of the Interior in 1871-1872.
Jean Casimir-Périer bravely fought during the 1870 Franco-Prussian war.
He was elected Deputy for the department of Aube in 1876, was
appointed Vice State Secretary of War in Jules Ferry's second
government, and was eventually elected President of the Chamber [of
Deputies] from January to December 1893.
On 3 December 1893, Casimir-Périer was appointed President of the
Council. The Republic was then threatened by anarchists, who committed
attempts and murders. Casimir-Périer promoted very severe
anti-anarchist laws, later nicknamed lois scélérates (villainous
laws). The phrasing of the laws was indeed vague and they could easily
be applied to journalists, trade unionists and political opponents.
Casimir-Périer resigned in May 1894.
On 24 June 1894, President of the Republic Sadi-Carnot was murdered in
Lyon by the Italian anarchist Caserio. The Chamber and the Senate
gathered in Versailles and elected Casimir-Périer on 27 June (451 votes
out of the 851 voters). The new President was very conservative and his
authoritarian attitude was expected to calm down the situation.
However, Casimir-Périer was Orleanist via his grand-father and
extremely wealthy, being the main shareholder of the coal mines of
Anzin, in the north of France. The anarchists and the socialists
immediatly rejected him and started a campaign of personal defamation
against him. Casimir-Périer overreacted and gave on 3 July a very
aggressive speech in the Chamber, saying he would use all the powers
granted to him by the Constitution.
In the beginning of July, a new law proposal attempted to strengthen
the anti-anarchist laws. The opposition and the unions were probably
the main targets of this law, since the anarchists had lost any popular
support after the assassination of the very popular and honest
Sadi-Carnot. During the summer 1894, the socialists had their congress
in Nantes, where they adopted the principle of the revolutionary
general strike, coined by the young lawyer Aristide Briand
(1862-1932), later one of the warmer defenders of reconciliation with
Germany and the League of Nations and awarded the Nobel Prize of Peace
in 1926. The Conseil Général des Fédérations Ouvri&elarge;res was founded during the congress, and became next year in Limoges the Confédération Générale du Travail (CGT).
In September 1894, the journalist Gérault-Richard published in the
Chambard a very violent pamphlet against the President, entitled A
bas Casimir (Down with Casimir). The journalist was sued and defended
by Jean Jaurès (1859-1914), who attacked once again the President and
his family. Gérault-Richard was sentenced to one year's imprisonment.
However, he was elected Deputy in January 1895 for the XIIIth district
of Paris. Casimir-Périer perceived this election as another personal
insult and felt abandoned by his own political majority.
On 15 January, the government led by Dupuy was defeated because of a
dirty affair of contracts with the railway companies. The next day, the
President said he could no longer afford the personal campaigns against
him and his lack of political power and resigned. He withdrew from
public life until his death.
The flag used by Président Jean Casimir-Périer is
kept in the private archive HCC (Habillement, Couchage, Casernement - Outfit, Bedding, Barracks) of the Direction du Commissariat de la Marine (Direction of the Admiralty Board) in Toulon.
The golden cypher in the centre of the white stripe is made of the interlaced letters "C" and "P".
Ivan Sache & Armand du Payrat, 30 September 2004