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Hippolyte Passy

French cavalry officer, economist and politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hippolyte Passy
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Hippolyte Philibert Passy (15 October 1793 – 1 June 1880)[1] was a French cavalry officer, economist and politician.

Quick Facts Deputy of Louviers, Minister of Finance ...
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Early life

Passy was born into an aristocratic Catholic family.[2]:41 His father, Louis François Passy,[3]:5 was recevuer general des finances (Receiver General of Finance), an important office in the Ancien Régime.[4]:222 His mother was Jaquette Pauline Hélène d’Aure.[5] Her brother, the Count d'Aure, was a riding master who fought for France in Egypt and Saint-Domingue.[2]:35

One of his brothers, Justin Félix, was a soldier and the father of Nobel Peace Prize winner Frédéric Passy.[2]:35 Another brother, Antoine François, was a botanist and geologist.[6]:10

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Military career

In 1809, Passy joined the Saumur Cavalry School.[7] He joined the French military in 1812,[7] and took part in Napoleon's Russian campaign.[2]:35 After leaving the military, Passy was a journalist until 1830.[7]

Political career

In October 1830, he was elected Deputy for Louviers.[7][1] After joining the Moderate Liberals, he served as reporter on the 1831 and 1835 Budgets.[7]

Passy held various ministerial positions in the July Monarchy and the French Second Republic.[2]:35 He served as Minister of Finance on several occasions:

  • 10 November 1834 – 18 November 1834[8]:113
  • 2 August 1836 – 6 September 1836 (acting)[8]:113
  • 12 May 1839 – 29 February 1840[8]:114

From 1835 to 1839, he was Vice-President of the Chamber.[7] During this time, he also served as Minister of Commerce from 22 February 1836 until 5 September 1836.[8]:131 From 16 April 1839 until 12 May 1839, he was President of the Chamber of Deputies.[1]

In 1843, Passy joined the Chamber of Peers.[9] He became Minister of Finance again during the 1849 Presidency of Napoleon III, and retired from politics after the 1851 coup d'état.[7]

In 1878, he was president of the International Congress on Provident Societies, a group dedicated to discussing economics and finance.[10]

Personal life

Passy married Claire Fourmont-Tournay, the daughter of Gisors's mayor, Eustache Fourmont-Tournay.[11]:255 They had a son, Edgar, who worked in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as an embassy secretary.[12] He was a member of the Société de l'histoire de France, nominated by Jules Desnoyers and his uncle Antoine.[12]

Both Passy and his brother Antoine were lifelong friends of Hortense Allart, the Italian-French writer.[6]:10 They met while visiting Regnaud de Saint-Jean d'Angély's widow near Paris.[6]:241 The brothers were helpful in helping Allart's husband become a local government architect.[6]:179

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Selected works

  • Des causes de l'inégalité des richesses. Paris: Pagnerre. 1848.
  • Des formes de gouvernement et des lois qui les régissent. Paris: Librairie Guillaumin et cie. 1876.

References

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