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François de Menthon

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François de Menthon
François de Menthon
AnonymousUnknown author (Keystone France) · Public domain · source
NameFrançois de Menthon
Birth date8 January 1900
Birth placeMontmirey-la-Ville, Jura, France
Death date2 June 1984 (aged 84)
Death placeMenthon-Saint-Bernard, Haute-Savoie, France
NationalityFrench
Alma materUniversity of Paris
OccupationLawyer, Politician, Resistance member
Known forFrench Resistance, Nuremberg Trials
PartyPopular Republican Movement
SpouseNicole de Menthon

François de Menthon was a prominent French lawyer, politician, and key figure in the French Resistance during World War II. He is best remembered for his significant role as the French Chief Prosecutor at the International Military Tribunal during the historic Nuremberg trials. Following the war, he served in several ministerial positions within the Provisional Government of the French Republic and was a founding member of the Popular Republican Movement, a major Christian democratic political force in the Fourth Republic.

Early life and education

Born into an aristocratic family in Montmirey-la-Ville in the Jura department, he was the son of Pierre de Menthon, a magistrate. He pursued his higher education in Paris, studying law and political science at the University of Paris. After graduating, de Menthon established a successful legal practice and became a professor of economics at the University of Nancy, where he was influenced by personalist thought. His early career was marked by involvement with Christian democratic intellectual circles and the Association Catholique de la Jeunesse Française, which shaped his political philosophy.

World War II and the Resistance

Following the Battle of France and the establishment of the Vichy regime, de Menthon immediately joined the French Resistance. He was a founding member of the Combat network in the southern Free Zone, working closely with figures like Henri Frenay and Bertrand d'Astorg. In 1941, he founded the influential clandestine newspaper, *Liberté*, which later merged with *Vérité* to become the famed *Combat*, edited by Albert Camus. De Menthon also played a crucial role in organizing the Bureau d'Information et de Presse, a key resistance press service. In 1943, he escaped to Algiers to join the Free French Forces under Charles de Gaulle, who appointed him Commissioner of Justice in the French Committee of National Liberation.

Postwar political career

After the Liberation of France, de Menthon served as Minister of Justice in the Provisional Government of the French Republic from 1944 to 1945, overseeing the early phase of the Épuration légale (legal purge). He was a founding member and prominent leader of the Popular Republican Movement, a pivotal center-right party in the French Fourth Republic. He held the position of Minister of Economy and Finance briefly in 1946 in the government of Georges Bidault. Later, he served as France's permanent representative to the European Coal and Steel Community and was elected to the French Senate from Haute-Savoie, where he focused on European and economic affairs until 1958.

Role in the Nuremberg Trials

De Menthon's most enduring legacy is his service as the French Chief Prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials. Appointed by de Gaulle, he delivered a powerful opening statement on 17 January 1946, famously condemning Nazism as a "conspiracy against the human spirit" and framing the defendants' crimes as an assault on universal spiritual values. He worked alongside prosecutors Robert H. Jackson of the United States, Hartley Shawcross of the United Kingdom, and Roman Rudenko of the Soviet Union. De Menthon emphasized crimes committed on French territory, including the Massacre of Oradour-sur-Glane and the persecution of the French Jews, and helped establish the legal concepts of crimes against humanity and war crimes in international law.

Later life and death

After leaving the French Senate in 1958, de Menthon largely retired from national politics but remained active in local affairs in his native Haute-Savoie. He continued to advocate for European integration and Christian democratic ideals. He spent his later years at the Château de Menthon-Saint-Bernard, the historic family estate overlooking Lake Annecy. François de Menthon died on 2 June 1984 in Menthon-Saint-Bernard and was buried in the local cemetery. His contributions to the French Resistance and international justice are commemorated by historians of the Nuremberg trials and the European Union.

Category:1900 births Category:1984 deaths Category:French Resistance members Category:People of the Nuremberg trials Category:Popular Republican Movement politicians