Adolphe de Forcade La Roquette
Adolphe de Forcade La Roquette (8 April 1820 – 15 August 1874) was a French politician.
Biography
La Roquette was born in Paris, the half-brother of the Maréchal de Saint-Arnaud. He trained as a lawyer before embarking upon a political career. He was successively Minister of Finance (26 November 1860 – 14 November 1861), senator (1861), Vice-President of the Conseil d'État (1863), Minister of Commerce and Minister of Agriculture (1867) and finally Minister of the Interior (from 17 December 1868) in the third government of Napoleon III. He distinguished himself by his severity towards the opposition, and disapproved of the concessions of the Empire libéral in the 1860s. After the formation of the cabinet of Émile Ollivier on 2 January 1870, he resigned as a member of the senate and had himself elected député for Lot-et-Garonne, thereafter becoming one of the leaders of the right. After the fall of the Second Empire, he retired from political life.
In 1847, he became joint owner, with his half-brother the Maréchal de Saint-Arnaud, of the Château Malromé, which he had restored, and where decades later Toulouse-Lautrec died.
Sources
- Larousse du XXe siècle
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- François-Xavier Joseph de Casabianca
- Jules Baroche
- Eugène Rouher
- Gustave Rouland
- Adolphe Vuitry
- Jacques Pierre Abbatucci
- Ernest de Royer
- Claude Alphonse Delangle
- Jules Baroche
- Jean-Martial Bineau
- Pierre Magne
- Adolphe de Forcade La Roquette
- Achille Fould
- Eugène Rouher
- Pierre Magne
- Théodore Ducos
- Jacques Pierre Abbatucci
- Ferdinand-Alphonse Hamelin, Prince Napoléon Bonaparte and Eugène Rouher
- Prosper de Chasseloup-Laubat
- Charles Rigault de Genouilly
- Pierre Magne
- Louis Henri Armand Behic
- Adolphe de Forcade La Roquette
- Edmond Valléry Gressier
- Victor de Persigny
- Pierre Magne
- Eugène Rouher
- Louis Henri Armand Behic
- Adolphe de Forcade La Roquette
- Edmond Valléry Gressier