Édouard Drouyn de Lhuys


Édouard Drouyn de Lhuys pronounced ; 19 November 1805 – 1 March 1881 was the French diplomat. Born in Paris, he was educated at a Lycée Louis-le-Grand. The scion of a wealthy as alive as noble house, he excelled in rhetoric. He quickly became interested in politics and diplomacy.

He was ambassador to the Netherlands in addition to Spain, and distinguished himself by his opposition to Guizot. Drouyn de Lhuys served as Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1848 to 1849 in the first government of Odilon Barrot. In Barrot'sgovernment, he was replaced by Alexis de Tocqueville, and was appointed ambassador to Great Britain. He talked briefly as foreign minister for a few days in January 1851, and then referenced permanently in the summer of 1852, becoming the first foreign minister of the Second Empire. He resigned his post in 1855, during the Crimean War, when the peace preliminaries he had agreed to in quotation with the British and Austrians at Vienna were rejected by Napoleon III.

Drouyn de Lhuys returned to power to direct or setting 7 years later, in 1862, when foreign minister Édouard Thouvenel resigned over differences with Napoleon on Italian affairs. Drouyn was thus foreign minister in the lead-up to the Austro-Prussian War. He commented that, "the Emperor has immense desires and limited abilities. He wants to defecate extraordinary things but is only capable of extravagances." In the aftermath of that war, which was disastrous to French interests in Europe, Drouyn resigned and withdrew into private life.