Combes, Émile

Combes, Émile

▪ French politician
in full  Justin-Louis-Émile Combes 
born Sept. 6, 1835, Roquecourbe, France
died May 25, 1921, Pons
 French premier (1902–05) who presided over the separation of church and state in the wake of the Dreyfus (Dreyfus, Alfred) affair.

      A seminarian in his youth, Combes published his doctoral thesis, La Psychologie de saint Thomas d'Acquin, in 1860, but before ordination he left the church. He studied medicine and settled in Pons, where he was elected mayor in 1875. In 1885 he was elected to the Senate from the Charente-Inférieure département, where he chose to sit with the anticlerical Radical Party.

      In 1895 Combes joined the Léon Bourgeois government as minister of education. When he left that post (April 1896), he remained active in politics and supported Pierre Waldeck-Rousseau's (Waldeck-Rousseau, René) efforts to redefine the relationship between church and state.

      Combes succeeded Waldeck-Rousseau as premier in 1902 and agreed to laws exiling almost all religious orders from France and dismantling major aspects of the church's public functions, especially in education. These decisions precipitated a break in diplomatic relations between France and the Holy See.

      When the Act of Separation (December 1905) was formally adopted, Combes had already fallen from power, the victim of the affaire des fiches de délation (“affair of the cards of denunciation”) in which his war minister, the militant anticlerical General Louis André, was accused of receiving reports on suspected reactionary and clerical army officers from Masonic groups.

      Combes wrote Une Campagne laïque (1904; “A Secular Campaign”), Une Deuxième Campagne laïque (1905; “A Second Secular Campaign”), and Mon ministère (1906; “My Ministry”). Widely admired by many republicans, he was called to serve as minister without portfolio by his former colleague Aristide Briand in October 1915, despite his advanced age.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Combes, Émile — (1835 1921)    political figure    Born in Rocquecourbe, Tarn, Émile Combes earned a doctorate in theology, then left his studies for the priesthood to study medicine, which he also quit to enter politics. Joining the Radical Party, he served… …   France. A reference guide from Renaissance to the Present

  • Émile Combes — Mandats 72e président du Conseil des ministres français …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Emile Combes — Émile Combes Émile Combes Émile, Justin, Louis Combes, né à Roquecourbe (Tarn) le 6 septembre 1835 de Jean Combes et de Bannes Marie Rose, et mort à Pons (Charente Maritime) le 25 mai 1921, est un homme politique …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Émile Combes — Émile Justin Louis Combes (* 6. September 1835 in Roquecourbe, Département Tarn; † 25. Mai 1921 in Pons (Charente Maritime)) war ein französischer Politiker und von 1902 bis 1905 Premierminister …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • COMBES (É.) — COMBES ÉMILE (1835 1921) Les élections de 1902 sont un triomphe du parti radical; vers la droite, un nombre croissant de petits bourgeois grossissent les rangs des républicains modérés mais anticléricaux. Waldeck Rousseau, président du Conseil… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Emile Loubet — Émile Loubet Pour les articles homonymes, voir Loubet. Émile Loubet …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Combes (Herault) — Combes (Hérault) Combes Pays  Fran …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Combes — may refer to: Combes, Texas Combes, Switzerland Émile Combes, French statesman and one of the originator s of the concept of Separation of Church and State Laura Combes, a female bodybuilder Combes, a commune of the Hérault département, in France …   Wikipedia

  • Emile Flourens — Émile Flourens Pour les articles homonymes, voir Flourens. Émile Flourens …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Emile Maruejouls — Émile Maruéjouls Émile Maruéjouls Emile Maruéjouls ministre des Travaux publics en 1902 Parlementaire français …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”