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Prosper de Chasseloup-Laubat

Justin Napoléon Samuel Prosper de Chasseloup-Laubat, 4th Marquis of Chasseloup-Laubat (29 May 1805, Alessandria, Department of Marengo, French Empire – 29 March 1873, Paris, France) was a French aristocrat and politician who became Minister of the Navy under Napoleon III and was an early advocate of French colonialism.

The Marquis of Chasseloup-Laubat
Prosper de Chasseloup-Laubat in 1862.
Minister of Marine and the Colonies
In office
24 November 1860 – 20 January 1867
MonarchNapoleon III
Preceded byFerdinand Hamelin
Succeeded byCharles Rigault de Genouilly
Personal details
Born(1805-05-29)29 May 1805
Alessandria, Italy
Died29 March 1873(1873-03-29) (aged 67)
Paris, France
NationalityFrench
OccupationPolitician

Early life and family edit

Chasseloup-Laubat was the descendant of a minor noble family from Saintonge whose members were Huguenot but converted to Catholicism in the 17th century. He was the youngest son of the General François de Chasseloup-Laubat, 1st Marquis of Chasseloup-Laubat (1754-1833), and of his wife Anne-Julie Fresneau de La Gataudière, granddaughter of François Fresneau de La Gataudière who had discovered the properties of rubber. His godparents were Emperor Napoleon I and his first wife Empress Josephine. His brother, Justin (1800-1847), 2nd Marquis of Chasseloup-Laubat, was a military and politician and died as he was serving as French ambassador to the German Confederation. At his death, the title of Marquis passed to his brother Prudent (1802-1863), also a military and politician, who as well died childless and was succeeded by Prosper. They had also a sister, Anne-Clémence de Chasseloup-Laubat (1798-1871) who married in 1818 François-Scipion, 1st Baron de Bernon.

Prosper de Chasseloup-Laubat was educated at Lycée Louis-le-Grand then became a civil servant and from 1828 worked at the Conseil d'État, thanks to the good relations of his father.

Career edit

Under the July Monarchy edit

Immediately after the July Revolution, Chasseloup-Laubat became aide-de-camp of the commander of the National Guard, Marquis de La Fayette, and despite the change of regime he remained at the Conseil d'État and was promoted inside its inner hierarchy.

In 1836, he was appointed as an assistant to Jean-Jacques Baude, Royal commissary in Algeria, and worked at Alger, and then at Tunis, Bône and Constantine. He was present at the failed siege of Constantine by the French army in November 1836, before turning back to France and reassuming his functions at the Conseil d'État. In 1838 he was appointed a councillor at the Conseiller d'État.

At the same time, he was also beginning a political career. On 3 September 1837, he was elected deputy of Charente-Inférieure, the Department where was situated the family seat, the château of La Gataudière, and he was reelected in November 1837, March 1839, July 1842 and August 1846. He took his seat with the Left Center and approved the government policy. He was also a member and then president of the departmental council of the Charente-Inférieure.

Minister under the Second Empire and advocate of French colonialism edit

 
Prosper de Chasseloup-Laubat according to Honoré Daumier.

The Revolution of 1848 was a momentary set-back for his career, but on 13 May 1849 he was elected again as a deputy for Charente-Inférieure. During the Second Republic, he voted with the Conservatives of the Party of Order and from 10 April to 26 October 1851 briefly served a first time as Minister of Marine under the Presidency of Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte.

After the coup d'état of December 1851, he was appointed a member of the consultative commission replacing the Chambre des Députés, and was one of the candidates of the government in Charente-Inférieure at the election of February 1852, where he was elected. As deputy to the Legislative Body (a new lower chamber replacing the Chambre des Députés), he worked for the restoration of the Empire, which was approved by referendum in November 1852. Nevertheless, in 1852 he was one of the members of the Legislative Body who took the liberty of criticizing the first budget of the new regime (they were called les budgétaires), and the same year he publicly protested the confiscation of the properties of the House of Orléans. He stayed a deputy until 1859, when he became a minister. On 25 May 1862, he was appointed a Senator of the Empire, a position he retained until the fall of the Empire in 1870.

Chasseloup-Laubat was an enthusiastic proponent of French colonial imperialism.[1] Member of the "Council of colonisation" which assisted the newly created Ministry for Algeria and the Colonies, in March 1859 he was himself put at the head of the Ministry in replacement of Prince Napoléon. Belonging to a generation of new politicians working to give a coherence to French colonial policy, he was one of the few ministers of Napoleon III who had not already held ministerial offices when the Second Empire was established. Just one month later, he personally visited Algeria, which he had known at the time of its conquest. He lost direct control over Algeria with the reestablishment of the function of Governor General of Algeria, but immediately became Minister of Marine and the Colonies in November 1860 and held that position for an exceptionally long period (1860-1867), making him a key figure of French early colonial expansion. He worked in combination with his counterpart, Foreign Minister Édouard Drouyn de Lhuys.

He was Minister at the time of the attacks on Danang and Saigon in Vietnam led by Charles Rigault de Genouilly and his successor Counter-Admiral Théogène François Page. On 18 February 1859, the French conquered Saigon and three southern Vietnamese provinces. The Vietnamese government was forced to cede temporary control of those territories to France in June 1862. When in 1863 the Vietnamese diplomat Phan Thanh Gian visited Napoleon III on an embassy in Paris, Chasseloup-Laubat pressured Napoleon III to have him give up a promise he had made to return the territories captured by the French in exchange for a loose French protectorate over the whole of Vietnam. He threatened Napoleon III with his resignation and that of the whole cabinet, forcing him to order the cancellation of the agreement in June 1864.[2] Chasseloup-laubat conceived the idea of conquest in the Far east, and asserted in February 1863, "it is a real empire that we need to create for ourselves".[3] In 1864, all the French territories in southern Vietnam were declared to be the new French colony of Cochinchina.

During his tenure as Minister of the Marine and the Colonies, he also modernised the French navy and inspired the creation at Brest of an institution for the orphans of the navy, placing it under the special protection of the Emperor.

With the help of his wife, he was also an actor of the elaborate social life of the Second Empire, a period popularly referred to as the fête impériale ("the Imperial festival"). On 13 February 1866, he gathered one of the most flamboyant receptions of the time, a masquerade ball during which, dressed as a Venetian noble, he received his 3000 guests (between whom the Emperor and the Empress) in the restored salons of the ministry, Rue Royale. The climax of the reception, which lasted until half past six in the morning, was a "Cortege of the Nations". It was also a symbolic expression of the minister's political stance and of France's imperialist aspirations.[4]

Chasseloup-Laubat was recalled to the government on 17 July 1869, as Minister-President of the Conseil d'État, and took part to the constitutional changes which were expected to transform the Second Empire into a parliamentary monarchy. However, after the collective resignation of the cabinet in December 1869, Émile Ollivier did not include Chasseloup-Laubat in the new cabinet he formed on 2 January 1870. He remained a senator until the end of the Second Empire.

After the fall of Napoléon III, Chasseloup-Laubat was elected once again a Deputy of Charente-Inférieure to the new National Assembly on 8 February 1871 and took his seat with the Orléanist parliamentary group, Centre droit. He still played a minor role as rapporteur of the law on the organisation of the army in 1872, and died one year later in Paris. He is buried at the Père Lachaise Cemetery.

Private life edit

On 18 August 1862 at Saint Augustin,[5] he married Marie-Louise Pilié (5 December 1841, New Orleans – April 1921, Paris[6]), a distant relative of his, whose family was from Saintonge, but established in Louisiana. She was the daughter of Louis Armand Pilié and of Rose Elisabeth Eleonore Lapice de Bergondy,[7] and a niece of Confederate General P. G. T. Beauregard.[8] She fostered her husband's career by playing the role of a social hostess for the high society of the Second Empire. They had two sons, who both were notable in sport:

The Marquis of Chasseloup-Laubat was President of the Société de géographie from 1864 to his death, and used also that honorary position to propagate his colonial agenda.[9]

Honours edit

A bronze statue in his honour was erected at Marennes. It was destroyed during the Vichy regime but replace by a new one after the war.[10] A street and a school in Saigon were named after him until the independence of Vietnam.

Style edit

  • 1817-1859: Viscount Prosper de Chasseloup-Laubat
  • 1859-1963: Count Prosper de Chasseloup-Laubat
  • 1863-1873: The Marquis of Chasseloup-Laubat

Ancestry edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Henry Kamm, Dragon Ascending: Vietnam and the Vietnamese, New York, 1996, p. 89.
  2. ^ Oscar Chapuis, The Last Emperors of Vietnam: from Tu Duc to Bao Dai, Westport (Conn.) – London, 2000, pp. 50-51.
  3. ^ S. Lemaire, P. Blanchard and N. Bancel, "Milestones in Colonial Culture under the Second Empire (1851–1870)", in Colonial Culture in France since the Revolution, ed. P. Blanchard, S. Lemaire, N. Bancel and D. Thomas, Indiana University Press, 2014, p. 78.
  4. ^ M. Battesti, La Marine de Napoléon III: une politique navale, Chambéry – Paris – Vincennes, 1997, vol. 1, p. 261.
  5. ^ C. Baroche, Second Empire. Notes et souvenirs, Paris, 1921, p. 212.
  6. ^ Le Figaro, 2 avril 1921: "Mme la marquise de Chasseloup Laubat douairière, veuve de l'ancien ministre de la marine sous Napoléon III, s'est pieusement éteinte, après une courte maladie, en son domicile, 4, rue de Marignan, à l'âge de soixante-dix-neuf ans."
  7. ^ Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Louisiana, Chicago, 1892, p. 534.
  8. ^ David Carroll, Henri Mercier and the American Civil War, Princeton, 1971, p. 344.
  9. ^ Alfred Fierro, La Société de géographie: 1821-1946, Geneva, 1983, pp. 57–58.
  10. ^ "Monument au marquis de Chasseloup-Laubat – Marennes | E-monumen". 5 July 2011.

References edit

  • Robert, Adolphe; Bourloton, Edgar; Cougny, Gaston, Dictionnaire des parlementaires français (1789-1891), vol. 2, p. 65
  • Jules Delarbre, Le marquis P. de Chasseloup-Laubat, 1805 (29 mars) – 1873, Paris, 1873.
  • Albert Duchêne, Un ministre trop oublié : Chasseloup-Laubat, Paris, 1932.
  • Fernand Lombard, Un Grand ministre de Napoléon III: Justin-Napoléon-Samuel-Prosper de Chasseloup-Laubat, Poitiers, 1970
Political offices
Preceded by Minister of the Navy
10 April 1851 – 26 October 1851
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Algeria and the Colonies
24 March 1859 – 24 November 1860
Succeeded by
himself
(Title changed to "Minister of the Navy and the Colonies")
Preceded by
Ferdinand Hamelin
(as Minister of the Navy)
Ministers of the Navy and the Colonies
24 November 1860 – 20 January 1867
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister President of the Conseil d'État
17 July 1869 – 2 January 1870
Succeeded by
French nobility
Preceded by
Prudent de Chasseloup-Laubat
Marquis of Chasseloup-Laubat
17 December 1863 – 29 March 1873
Succeeded by

prosper, chasseloup, laubat, chasseloup, laubat, redirects, here, french, ship, french, cruiser, chasseloup, laubat, justin, napoléon, samuel, marquis, chasseloup, laubat, 1805, alessandria, department, marengo, french, empire, march, 1873, paris, france, fren. Chasseloup Laubat redirects here For French ship see French cruiser Chasseloup Laubat Justin Napoleon Samuel Prosper de Chasseloup Laubat 4th Marquis of Chasseloup Laubat 29 May 1805 Alessandria Department of Marengo French Empire 29 March 1873 Paris France was a French aristocrat and politician who became Minister of the Navy under Napoleon III and was an early advocate of French colonialism The Marquis of Chasseloup LaubatProsper de Chasseloup Laubat in 1862 Minister of Marine and the ColoniesIn office 24 November 1860 20 January 1867MonarchNapoleon IIIPreceded byFerdinand HamelinSucceeded byCharles Rigault de GenouillyPersonal detailsBorn 1805 05 29 29 May 1805Alessandria ItalyDied29 March 1873 1873 03 29 aged 67 Paris FranceNationalityFrenchOccupationPolitician Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Career 2 1 Under the July Monarchy 2 2 Minister under the Second Empire and advocate of French colonialism 3 Private life 4 Honours 5 Style 5 1 Ancestry 6 Notes 7 ReferencesEarly life and family editChasseloup Laubat was the descendant of a minor noble family from Saintonge whose members were Huguenot but converted to Catholicism in the 17th century He was the youngest son of the General Francois de Chasseloup Laubat 1st Marquis of Chasseloup Laubat 1754 1833 and of his wife Anne Julie Fresneau de La Gataudiere granddaughter of Francois Fresneau de La Gataudiere who had discovered the properties of rubber His godparents were Emperor Napoleon I and his first wife Empress Josephine His brother Justin 1800 1847 2nd Marquis of Chasseloup Laubat was a military and politician and died as he was serving as French ambassador to the German Confederation At his death the title of Marquis passed to his brother Prudent 1802 1863 also a military and politician who as well died childless and was succeeded by Prosper They had also a sister Anne Clemence de Chasseloup Laubat 1798 1871 who married in 1818 Francois Scipion 1st Baron de Bernon Prosper de Chasseloup Laubat was educated at Lycee Louis le Grand then became a civil servant and from 1828 worked at the Conseil d Etat thanks to the good relations of his father Career editUnder the July Monarchy edit Immediately after the July Revolution Chasseloup Laubat became aide de camp of the commander of the National Guard Marquis de La Fayette and despite the change of regime he remained at the Conseil d Etat and was promoted inside its inner hierarchy In 1836 he was appointed as an assistant to Jean Jacques Baude Royal commissary in Algeria and worked at Alger and then at Tunis Bone and Constantine He was present at the failed siege of Constantine by the French army in November 1836 before turning back to France and reassuming his functions at the Conseil d Etat In 1838 he was appointed a councillor at the Conseiller d Etat At the same time he was also beginning a political career On 3 September 1837 he was elected deputy of Charente Inferieure the Department where was situated the family seat the chateau of La Gataudiere and he was reelected in November 1837 March 1839 July 1842 and August 1846 He took his seat with the Left Center and approved the government policy He was also a member and then president of the departmental council of the Charente Inferieure Minister under the Second Empire and advocate of French colonialism edit nbsp Prosper de Chasseloup Laubat according to Honore Daumier The Revolution of 1848 was a momentary set back for his career but on 13 May 1849 he was elected again as a deputy for Charente Inferieure During the Second Republic he voted with the Conservatives of the Party of Order and from 10 April to 26 October 1851 briefly served a first time as Minister of Marine under the Presidency of Louis Napoleon Bonaparte After the coup d etat of December 1851 he was appointed a member of the consultative commission replacing the Chambre des Deputes and was one of the candidates of the government in Charente Inferieure at the election of February 1852 where he was elected As deputy to the Legislative Body a new lower chamber replacing the Chambre des Deputes he worked for the restoration of the Empire which was approved by referendum in November 1852 Nevertheless in 1852 he was one of the members of the Legislative Body who took the liberty of criticizing the first budget of the new regime they were called les budgetaires and the same year he publicly protested the confiscation of the properties of the House of Orleans He stayed a deputy until 1859 when he became a minister On 25 May 1862 he was appointed a Senator of the Empire a position he retained until the fall of the Empire in 1870 Chasseloup Laubat was an enthusiastic proponent of French colonial imperialism 1 Member of the Council of colonisation which assisted the newly created Ministry for Algeria and the Colonies in March 1859 he was himself put at the head of the Ministry in replacement of Prince Napoleon Belonging to a generation of new politicians working to give a coherence to French colonial policy he was one of the few ministers of Napoleon III who had not already held ministerial offices when the Second Empire was established Just one month later he personally visited Algeria which he had known at the time of its conquest He lost direct control over Algeria with the reestablishment of the function of Governor General of Algeria but immediately became Minister of Marine and the Colonies in November 1860 and held that position for an exceptionally long period 1860 1867 making him a key figure of French early colonial expansion He worked in combination with his counterpart Foreign Minister Edouard Drouyn de Lhuys He was Minister at the time of the attacks on Danang and Saigon in Vietnam led by Charles Rigault de Genouilly and his successor Counter Admiral Theogene Francois Page On 18 February 1859 the French conquered Saigon and three southern Vietnamese provinces The Vietnamese government was forced to cede temporary control of those territories to France in June 1862 When in 1863 the Vietnamese diplomat Phan Thanh Gian visited Napoleon III on an embassy in Paris Chasseloup Laubat pressured Napoleon III to have him give up a promise he had made to return the territories captured by the French in exchange for a loose French protectorate over the whole of Vietnam He threatened Napoleon III with his resignation and that of the whole cabinet forcing him to order the cancellation of the agreement in June 1864 2 Chasseloup laubat conceived the idea of conquest in the Far east and asserted in February 1863 it is a real empire that we need to create for ourselves 3 In 1864 all the French territories in southern Vietnam were declared to be the new French colony of Cochinchina During his tenure as Minister of the Marine and the Colonies he also modernised the French navy and inspired the creation at Brest of an institution for the orphans of the navy placing it under the special protection of the Emperor With the help of his wife he was also an actor of the elaborate social life of the Second Empire a period popularly referred to as the fete imperiale the Imperial festival On 13 February 1866 he gathered one of the most flamboyant receptions of the time a masquerade ball during which dressed as a Venetian noble he received his 3000 guests between whom the Emperor and the Empress in the restored salons of the ministry Rue Royale The climax of the reception which lasted until half past six in the morning was a Cortege of the Nations It was also a symbolic expression of the minister s political stance and of France s imperialist aspirations 4 Chasseloup Laubat was recalled to the government on 17 July 1869 as Minister President of the Conseil d Etat and took part to the constitutional changes which were expected to transform the Second Empire into a parliamentary monarchy However after the collective resignation of the cabinet in December 1869 Emile Ollivier did not include Chasseloup Laubat in the new cabinet he formed on 2 January 1870 He remained a senator until the end of the Second Empire After the fall of Napoleon III Chasseloup Laubat was elected once again a Deputy of Charente Inferieure to the new National Assembly on 8 February 1871 and took his seat with the Orleanist parliamentary group Centre droit He still played a minor role as rapporteur of the law on the organisation of the army in 1872 and died one year later in Paris He is buried at the Pere Lachaise Cemetery Private life editOn 18 August 1862 at Saint Augustin 5 he married Marie Louise Pilie 5 December 1841 New Orleans April 1921 Paris 6 a distant relative of his whose family was from Saintonge but established in Louisiana She was the daughter of Louis Armand Pilie and of Rose Elisabeth Eleonore Lapice de Bergondy 7 and a niece of Confederate General P G T Beauregard 8 She fostered her husband s career by playing the role of a social hostess for the high society of the Second Empire They had two sons who both were notable in sport Louis de Chasseloup Laubat 5th Marquis of Chasseloup Laubat 1863 1954 was president of the French Fencing Federation Federation francaise d escrime and co wrote the rules for international fencing competition Count Gaston de Chasseloup Laubat 1867 1903 a race car driver is known for setting the first recognised automobile land speed record The Marquis of Chasseloup Laubat was President of the Societe de geographie from 1864 to his death and used also that honorary position to propagate his colonial agenda 9 Honours editCommander 1851 then Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour 18 September 1860 Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus Grand Cross of the Order of Christ Portugal Grand Cross of the Order of the Oak Crown Grand Cross of the Order of Charles III Grand Cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic Grand Cross of the Order of Glory Tunisia Grand Cross of the Imperial Order of Our Lady of GuadalupeA bronze statue in his honour was erected at Marennes It was destroyed during the Vichy regime but replace by a new one after the war 10 A street and a school in Saigon were named after him until the independence of Vietnam Style edit1817 1859 Viscount Prosper de Chasseloup Laubat 1859 1963 Count Prosper de Chasseloup Laubat 1863 1873 The Marquis of Chasseloup LaubatAncestry edit Ancestors of Prosper de Chasseloup Laubat16 Nathanael Chasseloup lord of Laubat ca 1600 1667 8 Nathanael Chasseloup de Laubat 1660 1722 knight of the Order of Saint Louis Governor of Monaco17 Jeanne Esnaud de La Classe married in 16414 Francois Chasseloup de Laubat18 Pierre Greisel de Stamberg9 Marie Salome Greisel de Stamberg 1725 married 28 May 170719 Anne Barbara Jenson2 Francois 1st Marquis of Chasseloup Laubat 1754 1833 20 Barthelemy Couyer 1636 1693 lord of Les Palus and Toucheronde10 Nathanael Couyer 1675 lord of Toucheronde 21 Jeanne Chasseloup de Laubat married 24 Dec 16645 Marguerite Esther Couyer de Toucheronde 1713 1780 married 15 Sep 173922 Elie Regnault lord of La Traverserie11 Esther Regnault 1752 married 8 Fev 171123 1 Prosper 4th Marquis of Chasseloup Laubat24 Francois Fresneau lord of La Ruchauderie12 Francois Fresneau de La Gataudiere 1703 1770 lord of La Ruchauderie25 Anne Regnault de La Gataudiere 1758 6 Charles Jean Baptiste Fresneau de La Gataudiere 1740 1795 26 Jacques Solain Baron lieutenant in the French navy13 Cecile Solain Baron 1749 married 10 Jun 173827 Cecile Gueguen3 Anne Julie Fresneau de La Gataudiere 1848 married 21 Dec 179428 Philippe Richier 1667 lord of La Rochelongchamps and Touchelonge14 Isaac Jacques Richier 1708 1775 Captain at the Regiment de Vexin29 Suzanne de Collignon married 24 Apr 17047 Suzanne Anne Marguerite Richier 1743 1794 married 17 Mar 176830 Charle Henri Martin de Bonsonge 1685 15 Anne Esther Martin de Bonsonge 1795 married 30 Nov 173931 Judith Michel de Beauroche married 20 May 1714Notes edit Henry Kamm Dragon Ascending Vietnam and the Vietnamese New York 1996 p 89 Oscar Chapuis The Last Emperors of Vietnam from Tu Duc to Bao Dai Westport Conn London 2000 pp 50 51 S Lemaire P Blanchard and N Bancel Milestones in Colonial Culture under the Second Empire 1851 1870 in Colonial Culture in France since the Revolution ed P Blanchard S Lemaire N Bancel and D Thomas Indiana University Press 2014 p 78 M Battesti La Marine de Napoleon III une politique navale Chambery Paris Vincennes 1997 vol 1 p 261 C Baroche Second Empire Notes et souvenirs Paris 1921 p 212 Le Figaro 2 avril 1921 Mme la marquise de Chasseloup Laubat douairiere veuve de l ancien ministre de la marine sous Napoleon III s est pieusement eteinte apres une courte maladie en son domicile 4 rue de Marignan a l age de soixante dix neuf ans Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Louisiana Chicago 1892 p 534 David Carroll Henri Mercier and the American Civil War Princeton 1971 p 344 Alfred Fierro La Societe de geographie 1821 1946 Geneva 1983 pp 57 58 Monument au marquis de Chasseloup Laubat Marennes E monumen 5 July 2011 References editRobert Adolphe Bourloton Edgar Cougny Gaston Dictionnaire des parlementaires francais 1789 1891 vol 2 p 65Jules Delarbre Le marquis P de Chasseloup Laubat 1805 29 mars 1873 Paris 1873 Albert Duchene Un ministre trop oublie Chasseloup Laubat Paris 1932 Fernand Lombard Un Grand ministre de Napoleon III Justin Napoleon Samuel Prosper de Chasseloup Laubat Poitiers 1970Political officesPreceded byAuguste Nicolas Vaillant Minister of the Navy10 April 1851 26 October 1851 Succeeded byHippolyte FortoulPreceded byNapoleon Joseph Charles Paul Bonaparte Minister of Algeria and the Colonies24 March 1859 24 November 1860 Succeeded byhimself Title changed to Minister of the Navy and the Colonies Preceded byFerdinand Hamelin as Minister of the Navy Ministers of the Navy and the Colonies24 November 1860 20 January 1867 Succeeded byCharles Rigault de GenouillyPreceded byAdolphe Vuitry Minister President of the Conseil d Etat17 July 1869 2 January 1870 Succeeded byFelix Esquirou de ParieuFrench nobilityPreceded byPrudent de Chasseloup Laubat Marquis of Chasseloup Laubat17 December 1863 29 March 1873 Succeeded byLouis de Chasseloup Laubat Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prosper de Chasseloup Laubat amp oldid 1191865147, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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