Georges Clemenceau

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Georges Clemenceau

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Georges Clemenceau , 1841-1929, French political figure, twice premier (1906-9, 1917-20), called "the Tiger." He was trained as a doctor, but his republicanism brought him into conflict with the government of Napoleon III, and he went to the United States, where he spent several years as a journalist and a teacher. Returning to France in 1869, he was mayor of Montmartre in Paris after the overthrow (1870) of Napoleon III. His political career, beginning in Revolution, continued to be a stormy one punctuated by verbal and physical duels. As a Socialist, he opposed the moderate Léon Gambetta ; drove Jules Ferry from power; and first supported but then bitterly opposed General Boulanger . A member of the chamber of deputies from 1876, he failed to win reelection in 1893 after being implicated in the Panama Canal scandal and then unjustly accused of being in the pay of the British. During the next nine years he devoted himself to journalism, writing a daily article in La Justice and founding (1900) Le Bloc. He was a passionate defender of Alfred Dreyfus in the Dreyfus Affair . In 1902, Clemenceau was elected senator, and in 1906 he became minister of the interior and then premier. During his tenure the first crisis over Morocco was settled and the alliance with Great Britain strengthened. In 1909 his cabinet fell and Aristide Briand became premier. In the next years Clemenceau vigorously attacked Germany and pressed for military preparedness. His newspaper, L'Homme libre (after its suppression in 1914, L'Homme enchâiné ), attacked the government for defeatism even after the outbreak of World War I. Succeeding Paul Painlevé as premier in Nov., 1917, Clemenceau formed a coalition cabinet in which he was also minister of war. He renewed the dispirited morale of France, persuaded the allies to agree to a unified command, and pushed the war vigorously until the final victory. Leading the French delegation at the Paris Peace Conference, Clemenceau insisted on Germany's disarmament and was never satisfied with the Versailles Treaty. He was the main antagonist of Woodrow Wilson , whose ideas he viewed as too idealistic. Ironically, he was defeated in the presidential election of 1920 because of what was regarded as his leniency toward Germany. Alexandre Millerand succeeded him as premier. Clemenceau retired to his native Vendée, where he wrote In the Evening of My Thought (tr. 1929) and other works.

Bibliography: See biographies by G. Bruun (1943, repr. 1962) and J. H. Jackson (1946, repr. 1962); study by J. King (1960).

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Clemenceau, Georges

World Encyclopedia | 2005 | © World Encyclopedia 2005, originally published by Oxford University Press 2005. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Clemenceau, Georges (1841–1929) French statesman. A moderate republican, he served in the Chamber of Deputies (1876–1893), attempted compromise during the revolt of the Paris Commune (1871) and strongly supported Dreyfus. He returned to the Senate in 1902 and was twice premier (1906–09, 1917–20). He led the French delegation at the Versailles Peace Conference. See also Dreyfus Affair

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Waiting for Alzheimer's; a[euro]Oh to be seventy again.a[euro] - Georges Clemenceau (1841-1929) French statesman (Remark on his eightieth birthday, noticing a pretty girl in the Champs ElysA[c]es). Ego 3.(If Symptoms Persist)
Newspaper article from: Manila Bulletin; 3/16/2008; 700+ words ; Byline: Dr. Jose S. Pujalte Jr. WATCHING Senate hearings on nothing reminds me of senile dementia. Witnesses (genuine or otherwise) eventually show signs of progressive confusion, memory loss, and mental deterioration. In 1906, Alois Alzheimer, a German neurologist studied the brain of a woman who
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Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 4/2/2008; 659 words ; Shrimp Clemenceau 4 or 5 servings Chicken was the original...creation, presumed to be the namesake of Georges Clemenceau (1841-1929), a French statesman...its name from his grandson, Pierre Clemenceau, who was a New Orleans bon vivant...
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Newspaper article from: International Herald Tribune; 11/24/2004; 246 words ; ...Tribune 11-24-2004 PARIS: Georges Clemenceau, wartime Premier of France...inevitable call of death. M. Clemenceau died as Dr. Laubry was hastening...said: ''It is all over. M. Clemenceau is dead.'' 2004 Copyright...
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Newspaper article from: Hartlepool Mail (Hartlepool, England); 7/2/2008; 414 words ; THE Clemenceau is affectionately known as Le Clem. The vessel is 714ft long with...Health and Safety Executive to import it. The vessel is named after Georges Clemenceau and it was built in the Brest shipyard. It was launched on December...
The character of wartime statesmen: Eliot Cohen discusses what made Lincoln, Clemenceau, Churchill and Ben-Gurion effective wartime leaders and analyzes how President George W. Bush stacks up.(Interview)
Magazine article from: Insight on the News; 5/13/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War, French leader Georges Clemenceau and World War I, Winston Churchill as Britain's...four case studies of great wartime leaders Lincoln, Clemenceau, Churchill and Ben-Gurion to discuss an alternative...
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Magazine article from: Partisan Review; 6/22/2002; ; 700+ words ; By Georges Clemenceau. Memoire du Livre. 159 francs. EVERY SO OFTEN FRANCE PRODUCES...obvious examples; in politics, there is the Tiger, sobriquet of Georges Clemenceau, a physician by training who, after a very American career as...
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Newspaper article from: The Washington Times; 1/23/1999; ; 700+ words ; Georges Clemenceau is known to Americans, vaguely, as...Woodrow Wilson. The better informed know Clemenceau as a Socialist member of the Chamber...opponent with pen, tongue or sword. Clemenceau had the born epigrammatist's talent...
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Newspaper article from: Jerusalem Post; 5/2/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...especially French prime minister Georges Clemenceau, Britain's Lloyd George and...nature was fundamentally good. Clemenceau, the eldest of the three, was...Lloyd George was viewed by Clemenceau as amusing, devious, untrustworthy...
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