Generated by DeepSeek V3.2| Raymond Poincaré | |
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| Name | Raymond Poincaré |
| Caption | Poincaré c. 1914 |
| Office | President of France |
| Term start | 18 February 1913 |
| Term end | 18 February 1920 |
| Predecessor | Armand Fallières |
| Successor | Paul Deschanel |
| Office2 | Prime Minister of France |
| Term start2 | 15 January 1922 |
| Term end2 | 8 June 1924 |
| Predecessor2 | Aristide Briand |
| Successor2 | Frédéric François-Marsal |
| Term start3 | 21 January 1912 |
| Term end3 | 21 January 1913 |
| Predecessor3 | Joseph Caillaux |
| Successor3 | Aristide Briand |
| Term start4 | 14 January 1912 |
| Term end4 | 21 January 1913 |
| Predecessor4 | Théodore Steeg |
| Successor4 | Aristide Briand |
| Birth date | 20 August 1860 |
| Birth place | Bar-le-Duc, France |
| Death date | 15 October 1934 (aged 74) |
| Death place | Paris, France |
| Party | Democratic Republican Alliance |
| Spouse | Henriette Benucci |
| Alma mater | University of Paris |
| Profession | Lawyer, Politician |
Raymond Poincaré was a dominant French statesman of the Third Republic, serving as President of France during the crucible of the First World War. A native of Lorraine, his political outlook was profoundly shaped by the loss of his home region to the German Empire in 1871, fostering a lifelong commitment to national strength and revanchism. As a lawyer, journalist, and prolific minister, he was a central figure in pre-war diplomacy and the wartime Union sacrée, later returning as Prime Minister of France to oversee the contentious Occupation of the Ruhr and stabilize the French franc during the Interwar period.
Born in Bar-le-Duc in the Meuse department, his family belonged to the upper bourgeoisie; his cousin was the renowned mathematician Henri Poincaré. The traumatic annexation of Alsace-Lorraine by Otto von Bismarck's German Empire occurred when he was ten, an event that indelibly marked his worldview. He excelled in his studies, earning a law degree from the University of Paris and becoming the youngest lawyer in France at the Paris Court of Appeal in 1880. Simultaneously, he pursued journalism, writing for prestigious publications like Le Temps and establishing a reputation for lucid, forceful prose.
Elected as a moderate Republican deputy for the Meuse in 1887, he quickly ascended through a series of ministerial posts. He served as Minister of Education in 1893 and 1895, and as Minister of Finance in 1894 and 1895. After a brief period focusing on his legal practice, he returned to government as Minister of Finance again in 1906 under Ferdinand Sarrien. His political stance hardened into nationalist conservatism, leading him to found the center-right Democratic Republican Alliance in 1911. Appointed Prime Minister of France and Minister of Foreign Affairs in January 1912, he worked tirelessly to strengthen the Triple Entente with the Russian Empire and the United Kingdom, while also reinforcing the French Army in response to the Agadir Crisis.
Elected President of France in 1913, he used the office's moral authority to advocate for military preparedness and firmness against German aggression. Following the Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, he conducted a state visit to Russia to affirm the alliance before the July Crisis escalated. Throughout the First World War, he was a symbol of national unity, presiding over the Union sacrée coalition governments, though his influence on military strategy was often checked by powerful figures like Georges Clemenceau. He made numerous visits to the front lines and steadfastly supported the war aims of restoring Alsace-Lorraine and securing reparations. His presidency concluded with the opening of the Paris Peace Conference and the signing of the Treaty of Versailles.
Following his term, he remained active in politics, serving in the Senate for the Meuse. He returned as Prime Minister of France from 1922 to 1924, a tenure defined by his uncompromising stance on German reparations. When Germany defaulted, he ordered the Occupation of the Ruhr by the French Army in 1923, a move that provoked international criticism and economic turmoil but ultimately led to the Dawes Plan. His final government in 1926, where he also served as Minister of Finance, successfully ended a financial crisis by stabilizing the French franc through the creation of the new Poincaré franc. He retired from public life due to ill health in 1929 and died in Paris in 1934.
Historians often label him "Poincaré-la-Guerre" (Poincaré-the-War), a testament to his perceived role in the hardline policies that contributed to the outbreak of the First World War, though this view is contested. He is primarily remembered as an unwavering French nationalist, a staunch defender of the Treaty of Versailles, and a key architect of the pre-war Triple Entente. His financial acumen during the 1920s crises preserved the Republic's economic stability. His extensive memoirs provide a critical primary source for understanding the diplomacy and politics of the era. Streets, schools, and the major hospital in Nancy bear his name, cementing his status as a pivotal, if controversial, figure in modern French history.
Category:1860 births Category:1934 deaths Category:Presidents of France Category:Prime Ministers of France