Ministry of Justice (France) - Former Ministers of Justice - Third Republic

Third Republic

  • Adolphe Crémieux, 1870–71
  • Jules Dufaure, 1871–73
  • Jean Ernoul, May–November, 1873
  • Octave Depeyre, 1873–74
  • Adrien Tailhand, 1874–75
  • Jules Dufaure, 1875–76
  • Louis Martel, 1876–77
  • Albert, duc de Broglie, May–November, 1877
  • François Le Pelletier, November–December, 1877
  • Jules Dufaure, 1877–79
  • Philippe Le Royer, February–December, 1879
  • Jules Cazot, 1879–82
  • Gustave Humbert, January–August, 1882
  • Paul Devès, 1882–83
  • Félix Martin-Feuillée, 1883–1885
  • Henri Brisson, 1885–1886
  • Charles Demôle, January–December, 1886
  • Ferdinand Sarrien, 1886–87
  • Charles Mazeau, May–November, 1887
  • Armand Fallières, 1887–88
  • Jean-Baptiste Ferrouillat, 1888–89
  • Jean François Edmond Guyot Dessaigne, February, 1889
  • François Thévenet, 1889–90
  • Armand Fallières, 1890–92
  • Louis Ricard, February–December, 1892
  • Léon Bourgeois, 1892–93
  • Jules Develle, March, 1893
  • Léon Bourgeois, March–April, 1893
  • Eugène Guérin, April–December, 1893
  • Antonin Dubost, 1893–94
  • Eugène Guérin, 1894–95
  • Ludovic Trarieux, January–November, 1895
  • Louis Ricard, 1895–96
  • Jean-Baptiste Darlan, 1896–97
  • Victor Milliard, 1897–98
  • Ferdinand Sarrien, June–November, 1898
  • Georges Lebret, 1898–99
  • Ernest Monis, 1899–1902
  • Ernest Vallé, 1902–05
  • Joseph Chaumié, 1905–06
  • Ferdinand Sarrien, March–October, 1906
  • Jean François Edmond Guyot Dessaigne, 1906–07
  • Aristide Briand, 1908–09
  • Louis Barthou, 1909–10
  • Théodore Girard, 1910–11
  • Antoine Perrier, March–June, 1911
  • Jean Cruppi, 1911–12
  • Aristide Briand, 1912–13
  • Louis Barthou, January–March, 1913
  • Antony Ratier, March–December, 1913
  • Jean-Baptiste Bienvenu-Martin, 1913-14
  • Alexandre Ribot, June, 1914
  • Jean Bienvenu-Martin, June–August, 1914
  • Aristide Briand, 1914–15
  • René Viviani, 1915–17
  • Raoul Péret, September–November, 1917
  • Louis Nail, 1917–20
  • Gustave L'Hopiteau, 1920–21
  • Laurent Bonnevay, 1921–22
  • Louis Barthou, January–October, 1922
  • Maurice Colrat, 1922–24
  • Edmond Lefebvre du Prey, March–June, 1924
  • Antony Ratier, June, 1924
  • René Renoult, 1924–25
  • Théodore Steeg, April–October, 1925
  • Anatole de Monzie, October, 1925
  • Camille Chautemps, October–November, 1925
  • René Renoult, 1925–26
  • Pierre Laval, March–July 1926
  • Maurice Colrat, July, 1926
  • Louis Barthou, 1926–29
  • Lucien Hubert, 1929–30
  • Théodore Steeg, February–March, 1930
  • Raoul Péret, March–November 1930
  • Henry Chéron, 1931
  • Léon Bérard, 1931–32
  • Paul Reynaud, February–June, 1932
  • René Renoult, June–December 1932
  • Abel Gardey, 1932–1933
  • Eugène Penancier, January–October, 1933
  • Albert Dalimier, October–November 1933
  • Eugène Raynaldy, 1933–34
  • Eugène Penancier, January–February, 1934
  • Henry Chéron, February–October, 1934
  • Henry Lémery, October–November, 1934
  • Georges Pernot, 1934–35
  • Léon Bérard, 1935–36
  • Marc Rucart, 1936–37
  • Vincent Auriol, 1937–38
  • César Campinchi, January–March 1938
  • Marc Rucart, March–April, 1938
  • Paul Reynaud, April–November 1938
  • Paul Marchandeau, 1938–39
  • Georges Bonnet, 1939–40
  • Albert Sérol, March–June 1940
  • Charles Frémicourt, June–July 1940

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Famous quotes containing the word republic:

    People think they have taken quite an extraordinarily bold step forward when they have rid themselves of belief in hereditary monarchy and swear by the democratic republic. In reality, however, the state is nothing but a machine for the oppression of one class by another, and indeed in the democratic republic no less than in the monarchy.
    Friedrich Engels (1820–1895)

    Jean Jacques Rousseau ... is nothing but a fool in my eyes when he takes it upon himself to criticise society; he did not understand it, and approached it with the heart of an upstart flunkey.... For all his preaching a Republic and the overthrow of monarchical titles, the upstart is mad with joy if a Duke alters the course of his after-dinner stroll to accompany one of his friends.
    Stendhal [Marie Henri Beyle] (1783–1842)