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Encyclopedia Britannica



MOLE, LOUIS MATHIEU, COMTE (17811855)

This article appears in Volume V18, Page 653 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: MIC-MOL
MOLE, LOUIS MATHIEU, COMTE (17811855) , French states-man, was born in Paris on the 24th of January 1781. His father, a president of the parlement of Paris, who came of the family of the famous president noticed below, was guillotined during the Terror, and Count Mole's early days were spent in Switzerland and in England with his mother, a relative of Lamoignon-Malesherbes. On his return to France he studied at the ecole centrale des travaux publics, and his social education was accomplished in the salon of Pauline de Beaumont, the friend of Chateaubriand and Joubert. A volume of Essais de morale et de politique introduced him to the notice of
Napoleon
 , who attached him to the staff of the council of state. He became master of requests in 18o6, and next year prefect of the Cote d'Or, councillor of state and director-general of bridges and roads in 1809, and count of the empire in the autumn of the same year. In November 1813 he became minister of justice. Although he resumed his functions as director-general during the Hundred Days, he excused himself from taking his seat in the council of state and was apparently not seriously compromised, for Louis XVIII. confirmed his appointment as director-general and made him a peer of France. Mole supported the policy of the duc de Richelieu, who in 1817 entrusted to him the direction of the ministry of marine, which he held until December 1818. From that time he belonged to the moderate opposition, and he accepted the result of the revolution of 183o without enthusiasm. He was minister for foreign affairs in the first cabinet of Louis Philippe's reign, and was confronted with the task of reconciling the European powers to the
change
  of government. The real direction of foreign affairs, however, lay less in his hands than in those of Talleyrand, who had gone to London as the
ambassador
  of the new king. After a few months of office Mole retired, and it was not until 1836 that the fall of
Thiers
  led to his becoming prime minister of a new government, in which he held the portfolio of foreign affairs. One of his first actions was the release of the ex-ministers of Charles X., and he had to deal with the disputes with Switzerland and with the Strassburg coup of Louis
Napoleon
 . He withdrew the French garrison from Ancona, but pursued an active policy in
Mexico
  and in Algeria. Personal and political differences rapidly arose between mole and his
chief
  colleague Guizot, and led to an open rupture in March 1837 in face of the general opposition to a grant to the duc de Nemours. After some attempts to secure a new combination Mole resonstructed his ministry in April, Guizot being excluded. The general election in the autumn gave him no fresh support in the Chamber of Deputies, while he had now to face a formidable coalition between Guizot, the Left Centre under
Thiers
 , and politicians of the Dynastic Left and the Republican Left. Mole, supported by Louis Philippe, held his ground against the general hostility until the beginning of 1839, when, after acrid discussions on the address, the chamber was dissolved. The new
house
  showed little
change
  in the strength of parties, but mole resigned on the 31st of March 1839. A year later he entered the
Academy
 , and though he continued to speak frequently he took no important share in party politics. Louis Philippe sought his help in his vain efforts to form a ministry in February 1848. After the revolution he was deputy for the Gironde to the Constituent Assembly, and in 1849 to the Legislative Assembly, where he was one of the leaders of the Right until the coup d'etat on the 2nd of December 1851 drove him from public life. He died at Champlatreux (Seine-et-Oise) on the 23rd of November 1855.
See P. Thureau-Dangin, Histoire de la monarchie de juillet (18841892); and Robert Cougny, Dict. des parlementaires franyais (1891).


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