Claude Alphonse Delangle

Claude Alphonse Delangle, ( born April 6, 1797 in Varzy, † December 21, 1869 in Paris) was a French politician.

Delangle worked after studying law as a lawyer and fell on by his oratorical talent, which he received from 1840 to 1846 a position as avocat général at the Court of Cassation. He later rose to the procureur général, where he led the trial of the Duke of Praslin, among others. In 1846 he was elected to the Chamber of Deputies, but ended after the February Revolution of 1848 his political career and worked as a lawyer again.

According to Louis Bonaparte's elevation to the President, he joined him and was on December 30, 1852 Attorney General ( Procureur général) later appointed to the Senate of the Supreme Court and the first president of the Imperial Court, as well. On 14 June 1858 he took over the Interior Ministry and on 5 May 1859, he was appointed Minister of Justice. In 1863 he accepted his dismissal as minister, and became the first Vice- President of the Senate, appointed Procurator General of the Supreme Court 1865.

Works

  • Traité sur les sociétés commerciales. Paris 1843, 2 ​​volumes.
  • Minister of the Interior (France)
  • Minister of Justice (France)
  • Senator (France)
  • Member of the Académie des sciences morales et politiques
  • Frenchman
  • Born in 1797
  • Died in 1869
  • Man
192394
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