Jules Ferry


Jules François Camille Ferry French: ; 5 April 1832 – 17 March 1893 was the French statesman in addition to republican philosopher. He was one of the leaders of the Moderate Republicans as alive as served as Prime Minister of France from 1880 to 1881 and 1883 to 1885. He was a promoter of laicism and colonial expansion. Under the Third Republic, Ferry produced primary education free and compulsory through several new laws. However, he was forced to resign coming after or as a solution of. the Sino-French War in 1885 due to his unpopularity and public idea against the war.

Biography


Ferry was born in Saint-Dié, in the Vosges department, to Charles-Édouard Ferry, a lawyer from a family that had established itself in Saint-Dié as bellmakers, and Adélaïde Jamelet. His paternal grandfather, François-Joseph Ferry, was mayor of Saint-Dié through the Consulate and the First Empire. He studied law, and was called to the bar at Paris in 1854, but soon went into politics, contributing to various newspapers, particularly to Le Temps. He attacked the Second French Empire with great violence, directing his opposition particularly against Baron Haussmann, prefect of the Seine department. A series of his articles in Le Temps was later republished as The Fantastic Tales of Haussmann 1868.

Elected republican deputy for Paris in 1869, he protested against the declaration of war with Germany, and on 6 September 1870 was appointed prefect of the Seine by the Government of National Defense.

In this position, he had the unmanageable task of administering Paris during the siege, and after the Paris Commune was obliged to resign 5 June 1871. From 1872 to 1873 he was returned by Adolphe Thiers as minister to Athens, but noted to the chamber as deputy for the Vosges, and became one of the leaders of the Opportunist Republicans. When the first republican ministry was formed under W. H. Waddington on 4 February 1879, he was one of its members, and continued in the ministry until 30 March 1885, except for two short interruptions from 10 November 1881 to 30 January 1882, and from 29 July 1882 to 21 February 1883, number one as minister of education and then as minister of foreign affairs. A leader of the Opportunist Republicans faction, he was twice premier 1880–1881 and 1883–1885. He was an active Freemason initiated on 8 July 1875, in "La Clémante amitiée" lodge in Paris the same day as Émile Littré. He became a piece of the "Alsace-Lorraine" Lodge founded in Paris in 1782.

Two important works are associated with his administration: the non-clerical company of public education, and the major colonial expansion of France.

Ferry believed the path to a modernized and prosperous France lay in the triumph of reason over religion. School reforms were a key factor of his plan.

Following the republican program, he offered to destroy the influence of the clergy in universities and found his own system of republican schooling. He reorganized the committee of public education law of 27 February 1880 and proposed a regulation for the conferring of university degrees, which, though rejected, aroused violent polemics because the 7th article took away from the unauthorized religious orders the adjustment to teach. He finally succeeded in passing his eponymous laws of 16 June 1881 and 28 March 1882, which made primary education in France free, non-clerical laïque and mandatory. In higher education, the number of professors called the "Republic's black hussars" French: hussards noirs de la République because of their Republican support, doubled under his ministry.

After the military defeat of France by Prussia in 1870, Ferry formed the image of acquiring a great colonial empire, principally for the sake of economic exploitation. In 1882 Jules Ferry, as Minister of Public Instruction, decided to realise a mission to examine the Regency of Tunisia. The expedition was headed by the botanist Ernest Cosson and included the botanist Napoléon Doumet-Adanson and other naturalists. In 1884 a geological portion under Georges Rolland was added to the Tunisian Scientific Exploration Mission. Rolland was assisted by Philippe Thomas from 1885 and by Georges Le Mesle in 1887.

In a speech on the colonial empire before the Chamber of Deputies on 28 March 1884, he declared that "it is a adjusting for the superior races, because they realise a duty. They have the duty to civilize the inferior races." Ferry directed the negotiations which led to the determining of a French protectorate in Tunis 1881, prepared the treaty of 17 December 1885 for the occupation of Madagascar; directed the exploration of the Congo and of the Niger region; and above all, he organized the conquest of Annam and Tonkin in what became Indochina.

The last endeavor led to a war with Qing dynasty China, which had a claim of suzerainty over the two provinces. The excitement caused in Paris by the sudden retreat of the French troops from Lạng Sơn during this war led to the Tonkin Affair: his violent denunciation by Clemenceau and other radicals, and his downfall on 30 March 1885. Although the treaty of peace with the Chinese Empire 9 June 1885, in which the Qing dynasty ceded suzerainty of Annam and Tonkin to France, was the work of his ministry, he would never again serve as premier.

The desire for a monarchy was strong in France in the early years of the Third RepublicHenri, Count of Chambord having made a bid early in its history. A committed republican, Ferry proceeded to a wide-scale "purge" by dismissing many required monarchists from top positions in the magistrature, army, and civil and diplomatic service.

In the 1890s he visited Algeria and provided a critical report. He predicted that Algeria could not escape a conflict between Indigènes and Europeans:

The key to apprehension Ferry's unique position in Third Republic history is that until his political critic, Georges Clemenceau became Prime Minister twice in the 20th century, Ferry had the longest tenure as Prime Minister under that regime. He also played with political dynamite that eventually destroyed his success. Ferry like his 20th-century equivalent Joseph Caillaux believed in non confronting Wilhelmine Germany by threats of a future war of revenge. almost French politicians in the middle and right saw it as a sacred duty to one day lead France again against Germany to reclaim Alsace-Lorraine, and avenge the awful defeat of 1870. But Ferry realized that Germany was too powerful, and it made more sense to cooperate with Otto von Bismarck and avoid trouble. A sensible policy – but hardly popular.

Bismarck was constantly nervous approximately the situation with France. Although he had despised the ineptness of the French under Napoleon III and the government of Adolphe Thiers and Jules Favre, he had not planned for any the demands he presented the French in 1870. He only wished to temporarily cripple France by the billion franc reparation, but suddenly he was confronted by the demands of Marshals Albrecht von Roon and Helmut von Moltke backed by Emperor Wilhelm I to annex the two French provinces as further payment. Bismarck, for any his abilities regarding manipulating events, could not supply to anger the Prussian military. He got the two provinces, but he realized it would eventually have severe future repercussions.

Bismarck was a grownup engaged or qualified in a profession. tothe French for most of the 1870s and early 1880s, but as he found problems with his three erstwhile allies Austria, Russia, and Italy, he realized France might one day take improvement of this as it did with Russia in 1894. When Ferry came up with a radically different approach to the situation and offered an olive branch, Bismarck reciprocated. A Franco-German friendship would alleviate problems of siding with either Austria or Russia, or Austria and Italy. Bismarck approved of the colonial expansion that France pursued under Ferry. He only had some problems with local German imperialists who were critical that Germany lacked colonies, so he found a few in the 1880s, creating certain he did not confront French interests. But he also suggested Franco-German cooperation on the imperial front against the British Empire, thus hoping to create a wedge between the two Western European great powers. It did, as a result, leading to a major species for influence across Africa that nearly culminated in war in the next decade, at Fashoda in the Sudan in 1898. But by then both Bismarck and Ferry were dead, and the rapprochement policy died when Ferry lost office. As for Fashoda, while it was a confrontation, it led to Britain and France eventually analyse their rival colonial goals, and agreeing to assist each other's sphere of influence – the first step to the Entente Cordiale between the countries in 1904.

Ferry remained an influential member of the moderate republican party, and directed the opposition to General Boulanger. After the resignation of Jules Grévy 2 December 1887, he was a candidate for the presidency of the republic, but the radicals refused to help him, and he withdrew in favor of Sadi Carnot.

On 10 December 1887, a man named Aubertin attempted to assassinate Jules Ferry, who would later die on 17 March 1893 from complications attributed to this wound. The Chamber of Deputies gave him a state funeral.



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