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Raymond Poincaré

Raymond Nicolas Landry Poincaré (UK: /ˈpwæ̃kɑːr/,[1] French: [ʁɛmɔ̃ pwɛ̃kaʁe]; 20 August 1860 – 15 October 1934) was a French statesman who served as President of France from 1913 to 1920, and three times as Prime Minister of France.

Raymond Poincaré
Official portrait, 1913
President of France
In office
18 February 1913 – 18 February 1920
Prime MinisterAristide Briand
Louis Barthou
Gaston Doumergue
Alexandre Ribot
René Viviani
Paul Painlevé
Georges Clemenceau
Alexandre Millerand
Preceded byArmand Fallières
Succeeded byPaul Deschanel
Prime Minister of France
In office
23 July 1926 – 29 July 1929
PresidentGaston Doumergue
Preceded byÉdouard Herriot
Succeeded byAristide Briand
In office
15 January 1922 – 8 June 1924
PresidentAlexandre Millerand
Preceded byAristide Briand
Succeeded byFrédéric François-Marsal
In office
21 January 1912 – 21 January 1913
PresidentArmand Fallières
Preceded byJoseph Caillaux
Succeeded byAristide Briand
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
15 January 1922 – 8 June 1924
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byAristide Briand
Succeeded byEdmond Lefebvre du Prey
In office
14 January 1912 – 21 January 1913
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byJustin de Selves
Succeeded byCharles Jonnart
Minister of Finance
In office
23 July 1926 – 11 November 1928
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byAnatole de Monzie
Succeeded byHenry Chéron
In office
14 March 1906 – 25 October 1906
Prime MinisterFerdinand Sarrien
Preceded byPierre Merlou
Succeeded byJoseph Caillaux
In office
30 May 1894 – 26 January 1895
Prime MinisterCharles Dupuy
Preceded byAuguste Burdeau
Succeeded byAlexandre Ribot
Minister of Education
In office
26 January 1895 – 1 November 1895
Prime MinisterAlexandre Ribot
Preceded byGeorges Leygues
Succeeded byÉmile Combes
In office
4 April 1893 – 3 December 1893
Prime MinisterCharles Dupuy
Preceded byCharles Dupuy
Succeeded byEugène Spuller
Personal details
Born
Raymond Nicolas Landry Poincaré

(1860-08-20)20 August 1860
Bar-le-Duc, France
Died15 October 1934(1934-10-15) (aged 74)
Paris, France
Political partyDemocratic Republican Alliance
Spouse
(m. 1904)
Alma materUniversity of Nantes
University of Paris
Signature

Trained in law, Poincaré was elected deputy in 1887 and served in the cabinets of Dupuy and Ribot. In 1902, he co-founded the Democratic Republican Alliance, the most important centre-right party under the Third Republic, becoming Prime Minister in 1912 and serving as President of the Republic from 1913 to 1920. He purged the French government of all opponents and critics and single-handedly controlled French foreign policy from 1912 to the beginning of World War I. He was noted for his strongly anti-German attitudes, shifting the Franco-Russian Alliance from the defensive to the offensive, visiting Russia in 1912 and 1914 to strengthen Franco-Russian relations, and giving France's support for Russian military mobilization during the July Crisis of 1914. From 1917, he exercised less influence as his political rival Georges Clemenceau had become Prime Minister. At the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, he advocated Allied occupation of the Rhineland for at least 30 years and French support for Rhenish separatism.

In 1922 Poincaré returned to power as Prime Minister. In 1923 he ordered the Occupation of the Ruhr to enforce payment of German reparations. By this time Poincaré was seen, especially in the English-speaking world, as an aggressive figure (Poincaré-la-Guerre) who had helped to cause the war in 1914 and who now favoured punitive anti-German policies. His government was defeated by the Cartel des Gauches at the elections of 1924. He served a third term as Prime Minister in 1926–1929.

Early years

 
Poincaré during his military service in the 1880s

Born in Bar-le-Duc, Meuse, France, Raymond Poincaré was the son of Nanine Marie Ficatier, who was deeply religious[2] and Nicolas Antonin Hélène Poincaré, a distinguished civil servant and meteorologist. Raymond was also the cousin of Henri Poincaré, the famous mathematician. He later wrote that "In all my years at school I saw no other reason to live than the possibility of recovering our lost provinces."[3] Educated at the University of Paris, Raymond was called to the Paris Bar, and was for some time law editor of the Voltaire. He became at the age of 20 the youngest lawyer in France.[4] and was appointed Secrétaire de la Conférence du Barreau de Paris. As a lawyer, he successfully defended Jules Verne in a libel suit presented against the famous author by the chemist, Eugène Turpin, inventor of the explosive melinite, who claimed that the "mad scientist" character in Verne's book Facing the Flag was based on him.[5] At the age of 26, Poincaré was elected to the Chamber of Deputies, making him the youngest deputy in the chamber.[4]

Early political career

Poincaré had served for over a year in the Department of Agriculture when in 1887 he was elected deputy for the Meuse département. He made a great reputation in the Chamber as an economist, and sat on the budget commissions of 1890–1891 and 1892. He was minister of education, fine arts and religion in the first cabinet (April – November 1893) of Charles Dupuy, and minister of finance in the second and third (May 1894 – January 1895). In Alexandre Ribot's cabinet, Poincaré became minister of public instruction. Although he was excluded from the Radical cabinet which followed, the revised scheme of death duties proposed by the new ministry was based upon his proposals of the previous year. He became vice-president of the chamber in the autumn of 1895 and, in spite of the bitter hostility of the Radicals, retained his position in 1896 and 1897.[6]

Along with other followers of "Opportunist" Léon Gambetta, Poincaré founded the Democratic Republican Alliance (ARD) in 1902, which became the most important centre-right party under the Third Republic. In 1906, he returned to the ministry of finance in the short-lived Sarrien ministry. Poincaré had retained his practice at the Bar during his political career, and he published several volumes of essays on literary and political subjects.

"Poincarism" was a political movement over the period 1902–1920. In 1902, the term was used by Georges Clemenceau to define a young generation of conservative politicians who had lost the idealism of the founders of the republic. After 1911, the term was used to mean "national renewal" when faced with the German threat. After the First World War, "Poincarism" refers to his support of business and financial interests.[7] Poincaré was noted for his lifelong feud with Georges Clemenceau.[8]

First premiership

Poincaré became prime minister in January 1912 and systematically rooted out all political opponents and critics from the government, thereby securing total control over French foreign policy as both prime minister and later as president.[9] Foreign policy decisions during his time in cabinet were approved unanimously almost every time.[9] He viewed the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs as an administrative organ.[10] A Germanophobe, Poincaré ruled out any kind of understanding with Germany.[9] His Germanophobia was based not so much on revanchism but rather on his belief that Germany was too powerful and becoming stronger and the balance of power had to be changed through war in France's favor.[11] Poincaré sought to prevent any reconciliation between Germany and Britain or Russia.[12]

During the Bosnian Crisis of 1908-1909 and the Second Moroccan Crisis in 1911, France and the Russian Empire had failed to support each other.[13] In 1912, Poincaré converted the 1894 Franco-Russian Alliance from a defensive agreement to a tool for offensive war that could be triggered by a dispute in the Balkans.[9] In August 1912, Poincaré visited Tsar Nicholas in Russia to bolster France's military alliance with the Tsarist state.[14][15]

Poincaré hoped to pursue an expansionist policy at the expense of Germany's unofficial ally, the Ottoman Empire.[16] Poincaré was a leading member of the Comité de l'Orient, the main group that advocated French expansionism in the Middle East.[4] The victory of the Balkan League in the First Balkan War was seen by Poincaré as a powerful threat to Austria's flank, strengthening the Triple Entente and weakening the military position of Germany and Austria-Hungary.[17]

Poincaré rejected Joseph Caillaux's proposal for a Franco-German alliance, arguing that Paris would be the junior partner, thus tantamount to ending France's status as a great power.[18] A fiscal conservative, he was deeply concerned about the financial effects of an ever more costly arms race. Being from Lorraine, whether he was a revancharde (revanchist) is disputed.[19] His family house was requisitioned for three years during the war.[2]

Presidency

 
Le Petit Journal announces the election of Poincaré (1913).

Pre-war

Poincaré won election as President of the Republic in 1913, in succession to Armand Fallières. His electoral victory was helped by some two million francs in Russian bribes to the French press.[3] The strong-willed Poincaré was the first president of the Third Republic since MacMahon in the 1870s to attempt to make that office into a site of power rather than an empty ceremonial role. During the Liman von Sanders crisis of 1913/1914, Poincaré anticipated war in two years and announced that "his entire effort is to prepare us for it".[20]

In early 1914, Poincaré found himself caught up in scandal when the leftish politician Joseph Caillaux threatened to publish letters showing that Poincaré was engaged in secret talks with the Vatican using the Italian government as an intermediary, which would have outraged anti-clerical opinion in France. Caillaux refrained from publishing the documents after the President pressured Gaston Calmette, editor of Le Figaro, not to publish documents showing that Caillaux had been unfaithful to his first wife, was involved in questionable financial dealings implicating a pro-German foreign policy. The matter might have remained settled had not the second Madame Caillaux, upset that Calmette might publish love letters written to her while her husband was still married to her predecessor, gone to Calmette's office on 16 March 1914 and shot him dead. The resulting scandal known as the Caillaux affair was the major French news story of the first half of 1914 causing Poincaré to joke that from now on he might send out Madame Poincaré to murder his political enemies since this method was working so well for Caillaux.[21]

July Crisis

On 28 June 1914, Poincaré was at the Longchamps racetrack when he received news of the assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo.[22] Poincaré was fascinated by the report but stayed on to watch the race.[22]

In 1913, it had been announced that Poincaré would visit St. Petersburg in July 1914 to meet Tsar Nicholas II. Accompanied by Premier René Viviani, Poincaré went to Russia for the second time (but for the first time as president) to reinforce the Franco-Russian Alliance. On 15 July, the Austro-Hungarian Foreign Minister, Count Leopold von Berchtold, used a back channel to informed foreign countries of Austria-Hungary's intention to present an ultimatum to Serbia.[23] When Poincaré arrived in St. Petersburg on 20 July, the Russians told him by 21 July of the Austrian ultimatum and German support for Austria.[23] Although Prime Minister Viviani was supposed to be in charge[clarification needed] of French foreign policy, Poincaré promised the Tsar unconditional French military backing for Russia against Austria-Hungary and Germany.[24] In his discussions with Nicholas II, Poincaré talked openly of winning an eventual war, not avoiding one.[20] Later, he attempted to hide his role in the outbreak of military conflict and denied having promised Russia anything.[20]

Poincaré arrived back in Paris on 29 July and at 7 am on 30 July, with Poincaré's full approval, Viviani sent a telegram to Nicholas affirming that:

in the precautionary measures and defensive measures to which Russia believes herself obliged to resort, she should not immediately proceed to any measure which might offer Germany a pretext for a total or partial mobilization of her forces.[25]

In his diary entry for the day, Poincaré wrote that the purpose of the message was not to prevent war from breaking out but to deny Germany a pretext and thereby obtain British support for the Franco-Russian alliance.[25] He approved of Russian mobilization.[25] A French covering force, five army corps strong, was deployed on the German border at 4:55 pm, as per normal premobilization procedure. Poincaré and Viviani demanded that the covering force be installed ten kilometers from the border, for the sole reason that France would look innocent in the eyes of Britain.[26] A note was immediately sent to London to tell the British about the maneuver and gain their sympathy against Germany.[27]

On 31 July the German ambassador in Paris, Count Wilhelm von Schoen, presented to Viviani a quasi-ultimatum warning that, if Russia did not end its mobilization within twelve hours, Germany would mobilize. Mobilization meant war.[28] That same day, the Chief of the General Staff of the French Army, General Joseph Joffre appealed for general mobilization, falsely claiming that Germany had been secretly mobilizing for two or three days.[29] Poincaré backed Joffre's request.[29] French general mobilization was decreed at 1600 hours on 1 August.[29] On 1 August, Poincaré lied to Francis Bertie, the British ambassador to France, claiming that Russian mobilization had only been decreed after Austria's.[30]

 
Poincaré with Woodrow Wilson (1918)

After Germany declared war on France on 3 August, Poincaré said: "Never was a declaration of war received with such satisfaction".[27] He appeared before the National Assembly at 3 pm on 4 August to announce that France was now at war forming the doctrine of the union sacrée in which he announced that: "nothing will break the union sacrée in the face of the enemy."[31] "Dans la guerre qui s'engage, la France […] sera héroïquement défendue par tous ses fils, dont rien ne brisera devant l'ennemi l'union sacrée" ("In the coming war, France will be heroically defended by all its sons, whose sacred union will not break in the face of the enemy"). During the meeting, Poincaré and Viviani were silent on Russia's mobilization, claiming instead that Russia had been negotiating to the end.[32]

Later war

Poincaré became increasingly sidelined after the accession to power of Georges Clemenceau as Prime Minister in 1917. He believed the Armistice happened too soon and that the French Army should have penetrated far deeper into Germany.[33] At the Paris Peace Conference of 1919, negotiating the Treaty of Versailles, he wanted France to wrest the Rhineland from Germany to put it under Allied military control.[34][35]

Ferdinand Foch urged Poincaré to invoke his powers as laid down in the constitution and take over the negotiations of the treaty due to worries that Clemenceau was not achieving France's aims.[36] He did not, and when the French Cabinet approved of the terms which Clemenceau obtained, Poincaré considered resigning, although again he refrained.[37]

Second premiership

 
Poincaré with President Alexandre Millerand in 1923.

In 1920, Poincaré's term as President came to an end, and two years later he returned to office as Prime Minister. Once again, his tenure was noted for its strong anti-German policies.[38]

Frustrated at Germany's unwillingness to pay reparations, Poincaré hoped for joint Anglo-French economic sanctions against it in 1922, while opposing military action. In April 1922, Poincare was greatly alarmed by the Treaty of Rapallo, the beginning of a German-Soviet challenge to the international order established by the Treaty of Versailles. He was disturbed that British Prime Minister David Lloyd George did not share the French viewpoint, instead almost welcoming Rapallo as a chance to bring Soviet Russia into the international system.[39] Poincaré came to believe by May 1922 that if Rapallo could not convince the British that Germany was out to undercut the Versailles system by whatever means necessary, then nothing would, in which case France would just have to act alone.[40] Further adding to Poincaré's fears was the worldwide propaganda campaign started in April 1922 blaming France for World War I as a means of disproving Article 231 of the Treaty of Versailles, which would thereby undermine the French claim to reparations.[41]

 
Poincaré with Painlevé and Briand (1925)

In the German-Soviet propaganda of the 1920s, the July Crisis of 1914 was portrayed as Poincaré-la-guerre (Poincaré's war), in which Poincaré put into action the plans he had allegedly negotiated with Emperor Nicholas II in 1912 for the dismemberment of Germany.[42] The French Communist newspaper L'Humanité ran a front-page cover-story accusing Poincaré and Nicholas II of being the two men who plunged the world into war in 1914.[43] The Poincaré-la-guerre propaganda proved to be very effective in the 1920s.[42]

Throughout the spring and summer of 1922, the British continued to spurn Poincaré's offers of an alliance with Britain.[40][44] Poincaré's attempt to compromise with the British on German reparations failed in 1922.[45] By December 1922 Poincaré was faced with British-American-German hostility and saw coal for French steel production and money for reconstructing the devastated industrial areas draining away.[46]

Poincaré decided to occupy the Ruhr on 11 January 1923, to extract the reparations himself. This, according to historian Sally Marks, "was profitable and caused neither the German hyperinflation, which began in 1922 and ballooned because of German responses to the Ruhr occupation, nor the franc's 1924 collapse, which arose from French financial practices and the evaporation of reparations."[47] The profits, after Ruhr-Rhineland occupation costs, were nearly 900 million gold marks.[48] During the Ruhr crisis, Poincaré made a failed attempt to establish diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union.[49][50] Poincaré lost the 1924 French legislative election "more from the franc's collapse and the ensuing taxation than from diplomatic isolation."[51]

 
Time Cover, 24 Mar 1924

Hall argues that Poincaré was not a vindictive nationalist. Despite his disagreements with Britain, he desired to preserve the Anglo-French entente. When he ordered the French occupation of the Ruhr valley in 1923, his aims were moderate. He did not try to revive Rhenish separatism. His major goal was the winning of German compliance with the Versailles treaty. Poincaré's inflexible methods and authoritarian personality led to the failure of his diplomacy.[52]

Third premiership

 
A 1932 electoral leaflet supporting Raymond Poincaré's achievements

Financial crisis brought him back to power in 1926, and he once again became Prime Minister and Finance Minister until his retirement in 1929. As Prime Minister, he enacted a number of franc stabilization policies, retroactively known as the Poincaré Stabilization Law.[53][54] His popularity as Prime Minister rose considerably following his return to the gold standard, so much so that his party won the April 1928 general election.[55]

As early as 1915, Raymond Poincaré introduced a controversial denaturalization law which was applied to naturalized French citizens with "enemy origins" who had continued to maintain their original nationality. Through another law passed in 1927, the government could denaturalize any new citizen who committed acts contrary to French "national interest".[citation needed]

Resignation and death

Due to his ill health, Poincaré resigned as Prime Minister in July 1929, refusing to serve another term as Prime Minister.[55] He died in Paris on 15 October 1934 at the age of 74.

Family

His brother, Lucien Poincaré (1862–1920), a physicist, became inspector-general of public instruction in 1902. He is the author of La Physique moderne (1906) and L'Électricité (1907).

Jules Henri Poincaré (1854–1912), an even more distinguished physicist and mathematician, was his first cousin.

See also

Citations

  1. ^ "Poincaré". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  2. ^ a b ↑ a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i et j Rémy Porte, "Raymond Poincaré, le président de la Grande Guerre", Nouvelle Revue d'Histoire, no 88 de janvier-février 2017, p. 44-46
  3. ^ a b McMeekin 2014, p. 66.
  4. ^ a b c Fromkin 2004, p. 80.
  5. ^ A letter which Verne later sent to his brother Paul seems to suggest that, though acquitted due to Poincaré's spirited defence, Verne did intend to defame Turpin.
  6. ^ Gooch, pp 137–151.
  7. ^ J. F. V. Keiger, Raymond Poincaré (Cambridge University Press, 2002) p126
  8. ^ Adamthwaite, Anthony Review of Raymond Poincaré by J. F. V. Keiger pages 491-492 from The English Historical Review, Volume 114, Issue 456, April 1999 page 491.
  9. ^ a b c d Paddock 2019, p. 115.
  10. ^ Paddock 2019, p. 124.
  11. ^ Paddock 2019, p. 118.
  12. ^ Paddock 2019, p. 119.
  13. ^ Tomaszewski, Fiona "Pomp, Circumstance, and Realpolitik: The Evolution of the Triple Entente of Russia, Great Britain, and France" pages 362-380 from Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas, Volume 47, Issue # 3, 1999 pages 369-370.
  14. ^ McMeekin 2014, p. 67.
  15. ^ Tomaszewski, Fiona "Pomp, Circumstance, and Realpolitik: The Evolution of the Triple Entente of Russia, Great Britain, and France" pages 362-380 from Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas, Volume 47, Issue # 3, 1999 pages 373-374.
  16. ^ Fromkin 2004, p. 81.
  17. ^ Paddock 2019, p. 120.
  18. ^ Herwig, Holger & Hamilton, Richard Decisions for War, 1914-1917, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004 page 114.
  19. ^ "Que dire de Poincaré ?". Mission Centenaire 14-18. 14 May 2022.
  20. ^ a b c Zuber 2014, p. 53.
  21. ^ Fromkin 2004, p. 142-143.
  22. ^ a b McMeekin 2014, p. 62.
  23. ^ a b Zuber 2014, p. 52.
  24. ^ Zuber 2014, pp. 52–53.
  25. ^ a b c McMeekin 2014, p. 295.
  26. ^ McMeekin 2014, p. 305.
  27. ^ a b Paddock 2019, p. 125.
  28. ^ McMeekin 2014, p. 320.
  29. ^ a b c Zuber 2014, p. 61.
  30. ^ McMeekin 2014, p. 356.
  31. ^ Smith, Leonard; Audoin-Rouzeau, Steéphane, & Becker, Annette France and the Great War, 1914-1918, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003 page 27.
  32. ^ McMeekin 2014, p. 375.
  33. ^ Margaret MacMillan, Peacemakers. The Paris Conference of 1919 and Its Attempt to End War (John Murray, 2003), p. 42.
  34. ^ MacMillan, p. 182.
  35. ^ Ernest R. Troughton, It's Happening Again (London: John Gifford, 1944), p. 21.
  36. ^ MacMillan, p. 212.
  37. ^ MacMillan, p. 214.
  38. ^ Étienne Mantoux, The Carthaginian Peace, or The Economic Consequences of Mr. Keynes (London: Oxford University Press, 1946), p. 23.
  39. ^ Keiger, John Raymond Poincaré, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002 p. 288.
  40. ^ a b Keiger, John Raymond Poincaré, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002 p. 290.
  41. ^ Keiger, John Raymond Poincaré, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002 p. 291.
  42. ^ a b Mombauer 2002, p. 200.
  43. ^ Mombauer 2002, p. 94.
  44. ^ Ephraim Maisel (1994). The Foreign Office and Foreign Policy, 1919-1926. Sussex Academic Press. pp. 122–23. ISBN 9781898723042.
  45. ^ Keiger, John Raymond Poincaré, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002 pp. 291–293.
  46. ^ Leopold Schwarzschild, World in Trance (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1943), p. 140.
  47. ^ Sally Marks, '1918 and After. The Postwar Era', in Gordon Martel (ed.), The Origins of the Second World War Reconsidered. Second Edition (London: Routledge, 1999), p. 26.
  48. ^ Marks, p. 35, n. 57.
  49. ^ Carley, Michael Jabara "Episodes from the Early Cold War: Franco-Soviet Relations, 1917-1927" 1275-1305 from Europe-Asia Studies, Volume 52, Issue #7, November 2000 pp. 1278-1279
  50. ^ Carley, Michael Jabara "Episodes from the Early Cold War: Franco-Soviet Relations, 1917-1927" 1275-1305 from Europe-Asia Studies, Volume 52, Issue #7, November 2000 p. 1279
  51. ^ Marks, p. 26.
  52. ^ Hines H. Hall, III, "Poincare and Interwar Foreign Policy: 'L'Oublie de la Diplomatie' in Anglo-French Relations, 1922-1924," Proceedings of the Western Society for French History (1982), Vol. 10, pp. 485–494.
  53. ^ Yee, Robert (2018). "The Bank of France and the Gold Dependency: Observations on the Bank's Weekly Balance Sheets and Reserves, 1898-1940" (PDF). Studies in Applied Economics. 128: 11.
  54. ^ Makinen, Gail; Woodward, G. Thomas (1989). "A Monetary Interpretation of the Poincaré Stabilization of 1926". Southern Economic Journal. 56 (1): 191. doi:10.2307/1059066. JSTOR 1059066.
  55. ^ a b "Raymond Poincaré". History.com.

Sources

  • Adamthwaite, Anthony (April 1999). "Review of Raymond Poincaré by J. F. V. Keiger". The English Historical Review. 114 (456): 491–492. doi:10.1093/ehr/114.456.491.
  • Fromkin, David (2004). Europe's Last Summer: Who Started the Great War in 1914?. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
  • Herwig, Holger & Richard Hamilton. Decisions for War, 1914-1917 (2004)
  • Keiger, J. F. V. (1997). Raymond Poincaré. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-57387-4., review
  • Maisel, Ephraim (1994). The Foreign Office and Foreign Policy, 1919-1926. Sussex Academic Press. pp. 122–23.
  • Marks, Sally '1918 and After. The Postwar Era', in Gordon Martel (ed.), The Origins of the Second World War Reconsidered 2nd ed. (London: Routledge, 1999)
  • McMeekin, Sean (2014). July 1914: Countdown to War. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0465060740.
  • Mombauer, Annika (2002). The Origins of the First World War. London: Pearson.
  • Paddock, Troy R.E. (2019). Contesting the Origins of the First World War: An Historiographical Argument. London: Routledge. ISBN 9781138308251.
  • Smith, Leonard; Audoin-Rouzeau, Steéphane; Becker, Annette (2003). France and the Great War, 1914-1918. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Zuber, Terence (2014). "France and the Cause of World War I". Global War Studies. 11 (3): 51–63. doi:10.5893/19498489.11.03.03.

Further reading

  • Bernard, Philippe, Henri Dubief & Thony Forster, The Decline of the Third Republic, 1914–1938, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985, oclc: 894680106
  • Clark, Christopher, The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914, New York: Harper Collins, 2012.
  • Gooch, G.P. Before the war: studies in diplomacy (2 vol 1936, 1938) online vol 2 pp 137–199.
  • Keiger, John F. V. "Raymond Poincaré and the Ruhr crisis." French Foreign and Defence Policy, 1918-1940 (Routledge, 2005) pp. 59-80.
  • Keiger, John F. V. Raymond Poincaré (Cambridge University Press, 2002).
  • Mayeur, Jean-Marie, Madeleine Rebirioux & J. R. Foster, The Third Republic from its Origins to the Great War, 1871-1914, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988
  • Wright, Gordon, Raymond Poincare and the French Presidency, New York: Octagon Books, 1967, oclc: 405223
  • Huddleston, Sisley, Poincaré: A Biographical Portrait,, Boston: Little, Brown & Company, 1924
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Poincaré, Raymond". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

Primary sources

  • Poincaré, Raymond, The Origins of the War, London: Cassell, 1922, online
  • Poincaré, Raymond, The memoirs of Raymond Poincare 1912 (1926) online
  • Poincaré, Raymond, The Memoirs Of Raymond Poincare 1913-1914 (1928) online
  • Poincaré, Raymond, In the Service of France: The Day After Agadir, 1912 (Vol. I) online , in French
  • Poincaré, Raymond, In the Service of France: The Balkans on Fire, 1912 (Vol. II) online , in French
  • Poincaré, Raymond, In the Service of France: Europe Under Arms, 1913 (Vol. III) online , in French
  • Poincaré, Raymond, In the Service of France: The Sacred Union, 1914 (Vol. IV)
  • Poincaré, Raymond, In the Service of France: The Invasion, 1914 (Vol. V)
  • Poincaré, Raymond, In the Service of France: The Trenches, 1915 (Vol. VI)
  • Poincaré, Raymond, In the Service of France: Siege War, 1915 (Vol. VII)
  • Poincaré, Raymond, In the Service of France: Verdun, 1916 (Vol. VIII)
  • Poincaré, Raymond, In the Service of France: The Troubled Year, 1917 (Vol. IX)
  • Poincaré, Raymond, In the Service of France: Victory and Armistice, 1918 (Vol. X)
  • Poincaré, Raymond, In the Service of France: In Search of Peace, 1919 (Vol. XI)

External links

Political offices
Preceded by Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts
1893
Succeeded by
Minister of Worship
1893
Preceded by Minister of Finance
1894–1895
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts
1895
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Worship
1895
Preceded by
Pierre Merlou
Minister of Finance
1906
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of France
1912–1913
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
1912–1913
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of France
1913–1920
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of France
1922–1924
Succeeded by
Minister of Foreign Affairs
1922–1924
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of France
1926–1929
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Finance
1926–1928
Succeeded by
Henry de Chéron
Regnal titles
Preceded by Co-Prince of Andorra
1913–1920
Served alongside:
Juan Benlloch i Vivó
Jaume Viladrich i Gaspa (Acting)
Succeeded by
Academic offices
Preceded by Rector of the University of Glasgow
1914–1919
Succeeded by
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Cover of Time magazine
24 March 1924
Succeeded by

raymond, poincaré, raymond, nicolas, landry, poincaré, ɑːr, french, ʁɛmɔ, pwɛ, kaʁe, august, 1860, october, 1934, french, statesman, served, president, france, from, 1913, 1920, three, times, prime, minister, france, official, portrait, 1913president, francein. Raymond Nicolas Landry Poincare UK ˈ p w ae k ɑːr eɪ 1 French ʁɛmɔ pwɛ kaʁe 20 August 1860 15 October 1934 was a French statesman who served as President of France from 1913 to 1920 and three times as Prime Minister of France Raymond PoincareOfficial portrait 1913President of FranceIn office 18 February 1913 18 February 1920Prime MinisterAristide BriandLouis BarthouGaston DoumergueAlexandre RibotRene VivianiPaul PainleveGeorges ClemenceauAlexandre MillerandPreceded byArmand FallieresSucceeded byPaul DeschanelPrime Minister of FranceIn office 23 July 1926 29 July 1929PresidentGaston DoumerguePreceded byEdouard HerriotSucceeded byAristide BriandIn office 15 January 1922 8 June 1924PresidentAlexandre MillerandPreceded byAristide BriandSucceeded byFrederic Francois MarsalIn office 21 January 1912 21 January 1913PresidentArmand FallieresPreceded byJoseph CaillauxSucceeded byAristide BriandMinister of Foreign AffairsIn office 15 January 1922 8 June 1924Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byAristide BriandSucceeded byEdmond Lefebvre du PreyIn office 14 January 1912 21 January 1913Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byJustin de SelvesSucceeded byCharles JonnartMinister of FinanceIn office 23 July 1926 11 November 1928Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byAnatole de MonzieSucceeded byHenry CheronIn office 14 March 1906 25 October 1906Prime MinisterFerdinand SarrienPreceded byPierre MerlouSucceeded byJoseph CaillauxIn office 30 May 1894 26 January 1895Prime MinisterCharles DupuyPreceded byAuguste BurdeauSucceeded byAlexandre RibotMinister of EducationIn office 26 January 1895 1 November 1895Prime MinisterAlexandre RibotPreceded byGeorges LeyguesSucceeded byEmile CombesIn office 4 April 1893 3 December 1893Prime MinisterCharles DupuyPreceded byCharles DupuySucceeded byEugene SpullerPersonal detailsBornRaymond Nicolas Landry Poincare 1860 08 20 20 August 1860Bar le Duc FranceDied15 October 1934 1934 10 15 aged 74 Paris FrancePolitical partyDemocratic Republican AllianceSpouseHenriette Benucci m 1904 wbr Alma materUniversity of NantesUniversity of ParisSignatureTrained in law Poincare was elected deputy in 1887 and served in the cabinets of Dupuy and Ribot In 1902 he co founded the Democratic Republican Alliance the most important centre right party under the Third Republic becoming Prime Minister in 1912 and serving as President of the Republic from 1913 to 1920 He purged the French government of all opponents and critics and single handedly controlled French foreign policy from 1912 to the beginning of World War I He was noted for his strongly anti German attitudes shifting the Franco Russian Alliance from the defensive to the offensive visiting Russia in 1912 and 1914 to strengthen Franco Russian relations and giving France s support for Russian military mobilization during the July Crisis of 1914 From 1917 he exercised less influence as his political rival Georges Clemenceau had become Prime Minister At the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 he advocated Allied occupation of the Rhineland for at least 30 years and French support for Rhenish separatism In 1922 Poincare returned to power as Prime Minister In 1923 he ordered the Occupation of the Ruhr to enforce payment of German reparations By this time Poincare was seen especially in the English speaking world as an aggressive figure Poincare la Guerre who had helped to cause the war in 1914 and who now favoured punitive anti German policies His government was defeated by the Cartel des Gauches at the elections of 1924 He served a third term as Prime Minister in 1926 1929 Contents 1 Early years 2 Early political career 3 First premiership 4 Presidency 4 1 Pre war 4 2 July Crisis 4 3 Later war 5 Second premiership 6 Third premiership 7 Resignation and death 8 Family 9 See also 10 Citations 11 Sources 12 Further reading 12 1 Primary sources 13 External linksEarly years Edit Poincare during his military service in the 1880s Born in Bar le Duc Meuse France Raymond Poincare was the son of Nanine Marie Ficatier who was deeply religious 2 and Nicolas Antonin Helene Poincare a distinguished civil servant and meteorologist Raymond was also the cousin of Henri Poincare the famous mathematician He later wrote that In all my years at school I saw no other reason to live than the possibility of recovering our lost provinces 3 Educated at the University of Paris Raymond was called to the Paris Bar and was for some time law editor of the Voltaire He became at the age of 20 the youngest lawyer in France 4 and was appointed Secretaire de la Conference du Barreau de Paris As a lawyer he successfully defended Jules Verne in a libel suit presented against the famous author by the chemist Eugene Turpin inventor of the explosive melinite who claimed that the mad scientist character in Verne s book Facing the Flag was based on him 5 At the age of 26 Poincare was elected to the Chamber of Deputies making him the youngest deputy in the chamber 4 Early political career EditPoincare had served for over a year in the Department of Agriculture when in 1887 he was elected deputy for the Meuse departement He made a great reputation in the Chamber as an economist and sat on the budget commissions of 1890 1891 and 1892 He was minister of education fine arts and religion in the first cabinet April November 1893 of Charles Dupuy and minister of finance in the second and third May 1894 January 1895 In Alexandre Ribot s cabinet Poincare became minister of public instruction Although he was excluded from the Radical cabinet which followed the revised scheme of death duties proposed by the new ministry was based upon his proposals of the previous year He became vice president of the chamber in the autumn of 1895 and in spite of the bitter hostility of the Radicals retained his position in 1896 and 1897 6 Along with other followers of Opportunist Leon Gambetta Poincare founded the Democratic Republican Alliance ARD in 1902 which became the most important centre right party under the Third Republic In 1906 he returned to the ministry of finance in the short lived Sarrien ministry Poincare had retained his practice at the Bar during his political career and he published several volumes of essays on literary and political subjects Poincarism was a political movement over the period 1902 1920 In 1902 the term was used by Georges Clemenceau to define a young generation of conservative politicians who had lost the idealism of the founders of the republic After 1911 the term was used to mean national renewal when faced with the German threat After the First World War Poincarism refers to his support of business and financial interests 7 Poincare was noted for his lifelong feud with Georges Clemenceau 8 First premiership EditPoincare became prime minister in January 1912 and systematically rooted out all political opponents and critics from the government thereby securing total control over French foreign policy as both prime minister and later as president 9 Foreign policy decisions during his time in cabinet were approved unanimously almost every time 9 He viewed the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs as an administrative organ 10 A Germanophobe Poincare ruled out any kind of understanding with Germany 9 His Germanophobia was based not so much on revanchism but rather on his belief that Germany was too powerful and becoming stronger and the balance of power had to be changed through war in France s favor 11 Poincare sought to prevent any reconciliation between Germany and Britain or Russia 12 During the Bosnian Crisis of 1908 1909 and the Second Moroccan Crisis in 1911 France and the Russian Empire had failed to support each other 13 In 1912 Poincare converted the 1894 Franco Russian Alliance from a defensive agreement to a tool for offensive war that could be triggered by a dispute in the Balkans 9 In August 1912 Poincare visited Tsar Nicholas in Russia to bolster France s military alliance with the Tsarist state 14 15 Poincare hoped to pursue an expansionist policy at the expense of Germany s unofficial ally the Ottoman Empire 16 Poincare was a leading member of the Comite de l Orient the main group that advocated French expansionism in the Middle East 4 The victory of the Balkan League in the First Balkan War was seen by Poincare as a powerful threat to Austria s flank strengthening the Triple Entente and weakening the military position of Germany and Austria Hungary 17 Poincare rejected Joseph Caillaux s proposal for a Franco German alliance arguing that Paris would be the junior partner thus tantamount to ending France s status as a great power 18 A fiscal conservative he was deeply concerned about the financial effects of an ever more costly arms race Being from Lorraine whether he was a revancharde revanchist is disputed 19 His family house was requisitioned for three years during the war 2 Presidency Edit Le Petit Journal announces the election of Poincare 1913 Pre war Edit Poincare won election as President of the Republic in 1913 in succession to Armand Fallieres His electoral victory was helped by some two million francs in Russian bribes to the French press 3 The strong willed Poincare was the first president of the Third Republic since MacMahon in the 1870s to attempt to make that office into a site of power rather than an empty ceremonial role During the Liman von Sanders crisis of 1913 1914 Poincare anticipated war in two years and announced that his entire effort is to prepare us for it 20 In early 1914 Poincare found himself caught up in scandal when the leftish politician Joseph Caillaux threatened to publish letters showing that Poincare was engaged in secret talks with the Vatican using the Italian government as an intermediary which would have outraged anti clerical opinion in France Caillaux refrained from publishing the documents after the President pressured Gaston Calmette editor of Le Figaro not to publish documents showing that Caillaux had been unfaithful to his first wife was involved in questionable financial dealings implicating a pro German foreign policy The matter might have remained settled had not the second Madame Caillaux upset that Calmette might publish love letters written to her while her husband was still married to her predecessor gone to Calmette s office on 16 March 1914 and shot him dead The resulting scandal known as the Caillaux affair was the major French news story of the first half of 1914 causing Poincare to joke that from now on he might send out Madame Poincare to murder his political enemies since this method was working so well for Caillaux 21 July Crisis Edit Main articles French entry into World War I and July Crisis On 28 June 1914 Poincare was at the Longchamps racetrack when he received news of the assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo 22 Poincare was fascinated by the report but stayed on to watch the race 22 In 1913 it had been announced that Poincare would visit St Petersburg in July 1914 to meet Tsar Nicholas II Accompanied by Premier Rene Viviani Poincare went to Russia for the second time but for the first time as president to reinforce the Franco Russian Alliance On 15 July the Austro Hungarian Foreign Minister Count Leopold von Berchtold used a back channel to informed foreign countries of Austria Hungary s intention to present an ultimatum to Serbia 23 When Poincare arrived in St Petersburg on 20 July the Russians told him by 21 July of the Austrian ultimatum and German support for Austria 23 Although Prime Minister Viviani was supposed to be in charge clarification needed of French foreign policy Poincare promised the Tsar unconditional French military backing for Russia against Austria Hungary and Germany 24 In his discussions with Nicholas II Poincare talked openly of winning an eventual war not avoiding one 20 Later he attempted to hide his role in the outbreak of military conflict and denied having promised Russia anything 20 Poincare arrived back in Paris on 29 July and at 7 am on 30 July with Poincare s full approval Viviani sent a telegram to Nicholas affirming that in the precautionary measures and defensive measures to which Russia believes herself obliged to resort she should not immediately proceed to any measure which might offer Germany a pretext for a total or partial mobilization of her forces 25 In his diary entry for the day Poincare wrote that the purpose of the message was not to prevent war from breaking out but to deny Germany a pretext and thereby obtain British support for the Franco Russian alliance 25 He approved of Russian mobilization 25 A French covering force five army corps strong was deployed on the German border at 4 55 pm as per normal premobilization procedure Poincare and Viviani demanded that the covering force be installed ten kilometers from the border for the sole reason that France would look innocent in the eyes of Britain 26 A note was immediately sent to London to tell the British about the maneuver and gain their sympathy against Germany 27 On 31 July the German ambassador in Paris Count Wilhelm von Schoen presented to Viviani a quasi ultimatum warning that if Russia did not end its mobilization within twelve hours Germany would mobilize Mobilization meant war 28 That same day the Chief of the General Staff of the French Army General Joseph Joffre appealed for general mobilization falsely claiming that Germany had been secretly mobilizing for two or three days 29 Poincare backed Joffre s request 29 French general mobilization was decreed at 1600 hours on 1 August 29 On 1 August Poincare lied to Francis Bertie the British ambassador to France claiming that Russian mobilization had only been decreed after Austria s 30 Poincare with Woodrow Wilson 1918 After Germany declared war on France on 3 August Poincare said Never was a declaration of war received with such satisfaction 27 He appeared before the National Assembly at 3 pm on 4 August to announce that France was now at war forming the doctrine of the union sacree in which he announced that nothing will break the union sacree in the face of the enemy 31 Dans la guerre qui s engage la France sera heroiquement defendue par tous ses fils dont rien ne brisera devant l ennemi l union sacree In the coming war France will be heroically defended by all its sons whose sacred union will not break in the face of the enemy During the meeting Poincare and Viviani were silent on Russia s mobilization claiming instead that Russia had been negotiating to the end 32 Later war Edit Poincare became increasingly sidelined after the accession to power of Georges Clemenceau as Prime Minister in 1917 He believed the Armistice happened too soon and that the French Army should have penetrated far deeper into Germany 33 At the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 negotiating the Treaty of Versailles he wanted France to wrest the Rhineland from Germany to put it under Allied military control 34 35 Ferdinand Foch urged Poincare to invoke his powers as laid down in the constitution and take over the negotiations of the treaty due to worries that Clemenceau was not achieving France s aims 36 He did not and when the French Cabinet approved of the terms which Clemenceau obtained Poincare considered resigning although again he refrained 37 Second premiership Edit Poincare with President Alexandre Millerand in 1923 In 1920 Poincare s term as President came to an end and two years later he returned to office as Prime Minister Once again his tenure was noted for its strong anti German policies 38 Frustrated at Germany s unwillingness to pay reparations Poincare hoped for joint Anglo French economic sanctions against it in 1922 while opposing military action In April 1922 Poincare was greatly alarmed by the Treaty of Rapallo the beginning of a German Soviet challenge to the international order established by the Treaty of Versailles He was disturbed that British Prime Minister David Lloyd George did not share the French viewpoint instead almost welcoming Rapallo as a chance to bring Soviet Russia into the international system 39 Poincare came to believe by May 1922 that if Rapallo could not convince the British that Germany was out to undercut the Versailles system by whatever means necessary then nothing would in which case France would just have to act alone 40 Further adding to Poincare s fears was the worldwide propaganda campaign started in April 1922 blaming France for World War I as a means of disproving Article 231 of the Treaty of Versailles which would thereby undermine the French claim to reparations 41 Poincare with Painleve and Briand 1925 In the German Soviet propaganda of the 1920s the July Crisis of 1914 was portrayed as Poincare la guerre Poincare s war in which Poincare put into action the plans he had allegedly negotiated with Emperor Nicholas II in 1912 for the dismemberment of Germany 42 The French Communist newspaper L Humanite ran a front page cover story accusing Poincare and Nicholas II of being the two men who plunged the world into war in 1914 43 The Poincare la guerre propaganda proved to be very effective in the 1920s 42 Throughout the spring and summer of 1922 the British continued to spurn Poincare s offers of an alliance with Britain 40 44 Poincare s attempt to compromise with the British on German reparations failed in 1922 45 By December 1922 Poincare was faced with British American German hostility and saw coal for French steel production and money for reconstructing the devastated industrial areas draining away 46 Poincare decided to occupy the Ruhr on 11 January 1923 to extract the reparations himself This according to historian Sally Marks was profitable and caused neither the German hyperinflation which began in 1922 and ballooned because of German responses to the Ruhr occupation nor the franc s 1924 collapse which arose from French financial practices and the evaporation of reparations 47 The profits after Ruhr Rhineland occupation costs were nearly 900 million gold marks 48 During the Ruhr crisis Poincare made a failed attempt to establish diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union 49 50 Poincare lost the 1924 French legislative election more from the franc s collapse and the ensuing taxation than from diplomatic isolation 51 Time Cover 24 Mar 1924 Hall argues that Poincare was not a vindictive nationalist Despite his disagreements with Britain he desired to preserve the Anglo French entente When he ordered the French occupation of the Ruhr valley in 1923 his aims were moderate He did not try to revive Rhenish separatism His major goal was the winning of German compliance with the Versailles treaty Poincare s inflexible methods and authoritarian personality led to the failure of his diplomacy 52 Third premiership Edit A 1932 electoral leaflet supporting Raymond Poincare s achievements Financial crisis brought him back to power in 1926 and he once again became Prime Minister and Finance Minister until his retirement in 1929 As Prime Minister he enacted a number of franc stabilization policies retroactively known as the Poincare Stabilization Law 53 54 His popularity as Prime Minister rose considerably following his return to the gold standard so much so that his party won the April 1928 general election 55 As early as 1915 Raymond Poincare introduced a controversial denaturalization law which was applied to naturalized French citizens with enemy origins who had continued to maintain their original nationality Through another law passed in 1927 the government could denaturalize any new citizen who committed acts contrary to French national interest citation needed Resignation and death EditDue to his ill health Poincare resigned as Prime Minister in July 1929 refusing to serve another term as Prime Minister 55 He died in Paris on 15 October 1934 at the age of 74 Family EditHis brother Lucien Poincare 1862 1920 a physicist became inspector general of public instruction in 1902 He is the author of La Physique moderne 1906 and L Electricite 1907 Jules Henri Poincare 1854 1912 an even more distinguished physicist and mathematician was his first cousin See also EditFrench entry into World War I Interwar FranceCitations Edit Poincare Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required a b a b c d e f g h i et j Remy Porte Raymond Poincare le president de la Grande Guerre Nouvelle Revue d Histoire no 88 de janvier fevrier 2017 p 44 46 a b McMeekin 2014 p 66 a b c Fromkin 2004 p 80 A letter which Verne later sent to his brother Paul seems to suggest that though acquitted due to Poincare s spirited defence Verne did intend to defame Turpin Gooch pp 137 151 J F V Keiger Raymond Poincare Cambridge University Press 2002 p126 Adamthwaite Anthony Review of Raymond Poincare by J F V Keiger pages 491 492 from The English Historical Review Volume 114 Issue 456 April 1999 page 491 a b c d Paddock 2019 p 115 Paddock 2019 p 124 Paddock 2019 p 118 Paddock 2019 p 119 Tomaszewski Fiona Pomp Circumstance and Realpolitik The Evolution of the Triple Entente of Russia Great Britain and France pages 362 380 from Jahrbucher fur Geschichte Osteuropas Volume 47 Issue 3 1999 pages 369 370 McMeekin 2014 p 67 Tomaszewski Fiona Pomp Circumstance and Realpolitik The Evolution of the Triple Entente of Russia Great Britain and France pages 362 380 from Jahrbucher fur Geschichte Osteuropas Volume 47 Issue 3 1999 pages 373 374 Fromkin 2004 p 81 Paddock 2019 p 120 Herwig Holger amp Hamilton Richard Decisions for War 1914 1917 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2004 page 114 Que dire de Poincare Mission Centenaire 14 18 14 May 2022 a b c Zuber 2014 p 53 Fromkin 2004 p 142 143 a b McMeekin 2014 p 62 a b Zuber 2014 p 52 Zuber 2014 pp 52 53 a b c McMeekin 2014 p 295 McMeekin 2014 p 305 a b Paddock 2019 p 125 McMeekin 2014 p 320 a b c Zuber 2014 p 61 McMeekin 2014 p 356 Smith Leonard Audoin Rouzeau Steephane amp Becker Annette France and the Great War 1914 1918 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2003 page 27 McMeekin 2014 p 375 Margaret MacMillan Peacemakers The Paris Conference of 1919 and Its Attempt to End War John Murray 2003 p 42 MacMillan p 182 Ernest R Troughton It s Happening Again London John Gifford 1944 p 21 MacMillan p 212 MacMillan p 214 Etienne Mantoux The Carthaginian Peace or The Economic Consequences of Mr Keynes London Oxford University Press 1946 p 23 Keiger John Raymond Poincare Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 p 288 a b Keiger John Raymond Poincare Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 p 290 Keiger John Raymond Poincare Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 p 291 a b Mombauer 2002 p 200 Mombauer 2002 p 94 Ephraim Maisel 1994 The Foreign Office and Foreign Policy 1919 1926 Sussex Academic Press pp 122 23 ISBN 9781898723042 Keiger John Raymond Poincare Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 pp 291 293 Leopold Schwarzschild World in Trance London Hamish Hamilton 1943 p 140 Sally Marks 1918 and After The Postwar Era in Gordon Martel ed The Origins of the Second World War Reconsidered Second Edition London Routledge 1999 p 26 Marks p 35 n 57 Carley Michael Jabara Episodes from the Early Cold War Franco Soviet Relations 1917 1927 1275 1305 from Europe Asia Studies Volume 52 Issue 7 November 2000 pp 1278 1279 Carley Michael Jabara Episodes from the Early Cold War Franco Soviet Relations 1917 1927 1275 1305 from Europe Asia Studies Volume 52 Issue 7 November 2000 p 1279 Marks p 26 Hines H Hall III Poincare and Interwar Foreign Policy L Oublie de la Diplomatie in Anglo French Relations 1922 1924 Proceedings of the Western Society for French History 1982 Vol 10 pp 485 494 Yee Robert 2018 The Bank of France and the Gold Dependency Observations on the Bank s Weekly Balance Sheets and Reserves 1898 1940 PDF Studies in Applied Economics 128 11 Makinen Gail Woodward G Thomas 1989 A Monetary Interpretation of the Poincare Stabilization of 1926 Southern Economic Journal 56 1 191 doi 10 2307 1059066 JSTOR 1059066 a b Raymond Poincare History com Sources EditAdamthwaite Anthony April 1999 Review of Raymond Poincare by J F V Keiger The English Historical Review 114 456 491 492 doi 10 1093 ehr 114 456 491 Fromkin David 2004 Europe s Last Summer Who Started the Great War in 1914 New York Alfred A Knopf Herwig Holger amp Richard Hamilton Decisions for War 1914 1917 2004 Keiger J F V 1997 Raymond Poincare Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 57387 4 review Maisel Ephraim 1994 The Foreign Office and Foreign Policy 1919 1926 Sussex Academic Press pp 122 23 Marks Sally 1918 and After The Postwar Era in Gordon Martel ed The Origins of the Second World War Reconsidered 2nd ed London Routledge 1999 McMeekin Sean 2014 July 1914 Countdown to War New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0465060740 Mombauer Annika 2002 The Origins of the First World War London Pearson Paddock Troy R E 2019 Contesting the Origins of the First World War An Historiographical Argument London Routledge ISBN 9781138308251 Smith Leonard Audoin Rouzeau Steephane Becker Annette 2003 France and the Great War 1914 1918 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Zuber Terence 2014 France and the Cause of World War I Global War Studies 11 3 51 63 doi 10 5893 19498489 11 03 03 Further reading EditBernard Philippe Henri Dubief amp Thony Forster The Decline of the Third Republic 1914 1938 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1985 oclc 894680106 Clark Christopher The Sleepwalkers How Europe Went to War in 1914 New York Harper Collins 2012 Gooch G P Before the war studies in diplomacy 2 vol 1936 1938 online vol 2 pp 137 199 Keiger John F V Raymond Poincare and the Ruhr crisis French Foreign and Defence Policy 1918 1940 Routledge 2005 pp 59 80 Keiger John F V Raymond Poincare Cambridge University Press 2002 Mayeur Jean Marie Madeleine Rebirioux amp J R Foster The Third Republic from its Origins to the Great War 1871 1914 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1988 Wright Gordon Raymond Poincare and the French Presidency New York Octagon Books 1967 oclc 405223 Huddleston Sisley Poincare A Biographical Portrait Boston Little Brown amp Company 1924 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Poincare Raymond Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Primary sources Edit Poincare Raymond The Origins of the War London Cassell 1922 online Poincare Raymond The memoirs of Raymond Poincare 1912 1926 onlinePoincare Raymond The Memoirs Of Raymond Poincare 1913 1914 1928 online Poincare Raymond In the Service of France The Day After Agadir 1912 Vol I online in French Poincare Raymond In the Service of France The Balkans on Fire 1912 Vol II online in French Poincare Raymond In the Service of France Europe Under Arms 1913 Vol III online in French Poincare Raymond In the Service of France The Sacred Union 1914 Vol IV Poincare Raymond In the Service of France The Invasion 1914 Vol V Poincare Raymond In the Service of France The Trenches 1915 Vol VI Poincare Raymond In the Service of France Siege War 1915 Vol VII Poincare Raymond In the Service of France Verdun 1916 Vol VIII Poincare Raymond In the Service of France The Troubled Year 1917 Vol IX Poincare Raymond In the Service of France Victory and Armistice 1918 Vol X Poincare Raymond In the Service of France In Search of Peace 1919 Vol XI External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Raymond Poincare Wikiquote has quotations related to Raymond Poincare Works by or about Raymond Poincare at Internet Archive Newspaper clippings about Raymond Poincare in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWPolitical officesPreceded byCharles Dupuy Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts1893 Succeeded byEugene SpullerMinister of Worship1893Preceded byAuguste Burdeau Minister of Finance1894 1895 Succeeded byAlexandre RibotPreceded byGeorges Leygues Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts1895 Succeeded byEmile CombesPreceded byCharles Dupuy Minister of Worship1895Preceded byPierre Merlou Minister of Finance1906 Succeeded byJoseph CaillauxPreceded byJoseph Caillaux Prime Minister of France1912 1913 Succeeded byAristide BriandPreceded byJustin de Selves Minister of Foreign Affairs1912 1913 Succeeded byCharles JonnartPreceded byArmand Fallieres President of France1913 1920 Succeeded byPaul DeschanelPreceded byAristide Briand Prime Minister of France1922 1924 Succeeded byFrederic Francois MarsalMinister of Foreign Affairs1922 1924 Succeeded byEdmond Lefebvre du PreyPreceded byEdouard Herriot Prime Minister of France1926 1929 Succeeded byAristide BriandPreceded byAnatole de Monzie Minister of Finance1926 1928 Succeeded byHenry de CheronRegnal titlesPreceded byArmand Fallieres Co Prince of Andorra1913 1920 Served alongside Juan Benlloch i VivoJaume Viladrich i Gaspa Acting Succeeded byPaul DeschanelAcademic officesPreceded byAugustine Birrell Rector of the University of Glasgow1914 1919 Succeeded byBonar LawAwards and achievementsPreceded byEugene O Neill Cover of Time magazine24 March 1924 Succeeded byGeorge Eastman Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Raymond Poincare amp oldid 1147335638, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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