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Théophile Delcassé

Delc*é caricatured by Guth for Vanity Fair, 1899

Théophile Delc*é (1 March 1852:– 22 February 1923) was a French politician who served as foreign minister from 1898 to 1905. He is best known for his hatred of Germany and efforts to secure alliances with Russia and Great Britain that became the Entente Cordiale. He belonged to Radical party and was a protege of Léon Gambetta.

Contents

  • 1 Biography
    • 1.1 Colonial affairs
    • 1.2 Foreign Minister
    • 1.3 Naval affairs
    • 1.4 Later career
  • 2 Honours
  • 3 Portrayal in media
  • 4 References
  • 5 Sources
  • 6 Further reading
  • 7 External links

Biography

Delc*é was born at Pamiers, in the Ariège département. He wrote articles on foreign affairs for the République Française and Paris, and in 1888 was elected conseiller général of his native département, standing as "un disciple fidèle de Léon Gambetta." In the following year he entered the chamber as deputy for Foix.

Colonial affairs

Delc*é was appointed under-secretary for the colonies in the second Ribot cabinet (January to April 1893), and retained his post in the Dupuy cabinet till its fall in December 1893. It was largely owing to his efforts that the French colonial office was made a separate department with a minister at its head, and to this office he was appointed in the second Dupuy cabinet (May 1894 to January 1895). He gave a great impetus to French colonial enterprise, especially in West Africa, where he organized the newly acquired colony of Dahomey, and despatched the Liotard mission to the upper Ubangi.While in opposition, Delc*é devoted special attention to naval affairs, and in noted speeches he declared that the function of the French navy was to secure and develop colonial enterprise, deprecated all attempts to rival the British fleet, and advocated the construction of commerce destroyers as France's best reply to England.

Foreign Minister

On the formation of the second Brisson cabinet in June 1898 he succeeded Gabriel Hanotaux as Foreign Minister, and retained that post under the subsequent premierships of Dupuy, Waldeck-Rousseau, Combes and Rouvier.In 1898 Delc*é had to deal with the delicate situation caused by Captain Marchand's occupation of the town of Fashoda in the Sudan (the Fashoda Incident) for which, as he admitted in a speech in the chamber on 23 January 1899, he accepted full responsibility, since it arose directly out of the Liotard expedition; and in March 1899 he concluded an agreement with Britain by which the difficulty was finally adjusted, and France consolidated her vast colonial empire in North-West Africa. In the same year he acted as mediator (the main mediator being Jules Cambon, French amb*ador in Washington) between the United States of America and Spain, and brought the peace negotiations to a successful conclusion.

Delc*é was originally a moderate willing to find a compromise with Germany, but Berlin ignored his overtures. He then became very anti-German, to the point that Kaiser Wilhelm called him "The most dangerous man for Germany in France." Delc*é improved relations between France and Italy: at the same time, he adhered firmly to the alliance with Russia, and in August 1899 made a visit to Saint Petersburg, which he repeated in April 1901. In June 1900 he made an arrangement with Spain, fixing the long-disputed boundaries of the French and Spanish possessions in West Africa. Finally, in his greatest achievement, he concluded the Entente Cordiale with Great Britain, covering colonial and other questions which had long been a matter of dispute, especially concerning Egypt, Newfoundland and Morocco. Suspicion of the growing entente between France and England soon arose in Germany, and in 1905 German *ertiveness was shown in a crisis which was forced on in the matter of French policy by Delc*é personally, a sore point with Germany. The situation became acute, and Germany forced Delc*é's resignation in early 1906. He retired into private life, but in 1908 was warmly welcomed on a visit to England.

Naval affairs

In 1909 Delc*é was appointed chairman of a commission appointed to investigate the French navy.The report was drawn up on 24 May 1909 and concluded that the French navy was unprepared and the naval administration and organization were in disarray.Delc*é was appointed Minister of Marine on 2 March 1911 in the cabinet of Ernest Monis.Delc*é promulgated closer cooperation between the British and French fleets. This arrangement was an important factor in leading Britain to side with France against Germany when World War I started.

On 25 September 1911, as the battleship Liberté was moored in Toulon harbor, an accidental explosion in one of her forward ammunition magazines for the secondary guns destroyed the ship.210 men died and 136 were seriously injured.The captain, Louis Jaurès, was on leave at the time.After the explosion there was a debate in the Chamber of Deputies in which the honour of Jaurès and the responsibility for the use of unstable powder by the navy was questioned.Jaurès had to face a court martial, but was acquitted unanimously on 21 December 1911.Paul Painlevé, president of the navy committee, appointed a commission of inquiry after the explosion, which followed that of the battleship Iéna.Captain Antoine Schwerer was a member of the commission of inquiry and wrote a scathing "Report on Naval Powders" (1912).Delc*é ordered that all ammunition made before 1907 be replaced.The older ammunition was removed from the ships, and the remainder was steadily replaced with a new explosive containing the diphenylamine as a stabilizer.Continued efforts were made to improve the powders, and there were no more major disasters.It was not until 1914 that the "powder crisis" was fully resolved.

Delc*é retained his position in the cabinet of Joseph Caillaux.When that fell on 14 January 1912 Raymond Poincaré urged Delc*é to become Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs.Delc*é declined, but agreed to remain Minister of the Navy in Poincaré's cabinet.

Later career

President Armand Fallières' term in office expired in January 1913, and Delc*é decided to leave the Ministry of Marine and run for the presidency. He did not succeed.After the election, which was won by Poincaré, a new cabinet was formed by Aristide Briand.Briand offered Delc*é the post of Minister of Marine or Minister of War in the new cabinet, but Delc*é declined. He would soon be appointed Amb*ador to Russia, and then Minister of War.On 26 August 1914 after the Germans announced successes in the north and east, René Viviani announced the resignation of the cabinet.In the new cabinet, announced within an hour, Viviani retained his post.Delc*é was Minister of Foreign Affairs, Aristide Briand was Minister of Justice and Alexandre Millerand was Minister of War.

Delc*é resigned from the Cabinet on 14 October 1915, partly on the grounds of differing opinions and partly because of ill health.

Honours

  • :Belgium: Grand Cordon of the Royal Order of Leopold, 1900
  • :Principality of Bulgaria: Grand Cross of the Order of St. Alexander, 1902
  • :Spain: Grand Cross of the Order of Charles III, with Collar, 9 July 1900
  • :United Kingdom: Honorary Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order, 4 May 1903

Portrayal in media

  • Portrayed by Harald Paulsen (Delc*é is credited as the "French Foreign Minister") in the 1941 German film Ohm Krüger.
  • Portrayed by Oliver Borlen in the 2012 Filipino film, El Presidente.

References

    Sources

    • Candar, Gilles; Duclert, Vincent (5 February 2014), Jean Jaurès (in French), Fayard, ISBN:978-2-213-68377-5, retrieved 26 October 2017
    • :This article:incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain::Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Delc*é, Théophile". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol.:7 (11th:ed.). Cambridge University Press. p.:953.
    • "French Ministry Resigns", The Independent, 7 September 1914, retrieved 24 July 2012
    • Gardiner, Robert, ed. (1979), Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905, Greenwich, UK: Conway Maritime Press, ISBN:978-0-8317-0302-8
    • Porter, Charles Wesley (1936), The Career of Théophile Delc*é, University of Pennsylvania Press, retrieved 27 October 2017
    • Schwerer, Antoine (1912), Rapport concernant les poudres de la marine, présenté à M. le ministre à la suite de l'enquête qui lui a été confiée, Paris: Impr. nationale, p.:268
    • Vego, Milan (31 October 2013), Austro-Hungarian Naval Policy, 1904-1914, Taylor & Francis, ISBN:978-1-136-71337-8, retrieved 27 October 2017

    Further reading

    • Andrew, Christopher M. Théophile Delc*é and the making of the Entente Cordiale: a reappraisal of French foreign policy 1898-1905 (Macmillan, 1968)
    • Brown, Roger Glenn. Fashoda reconsidered: the impact of domestic politics on French policy in Africa, 1893-1898 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1970)
    • Gooch, G.P. Before the war: studies in diplomacy (vol 1 1936) online long chapter on Delc*é, pp:87–186.

    External links

    • "Delc*é, Théophile":. The New Student's Reference Work:. 1914.
    • Newspaper clippings about Théophile Delc*é in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW