- Louis Étienne Arthur Dubreuil, vicomte de La Gueronnière
Louis Étienne Arthur du Breuil, vicomte de La Guéronnière (
1816 -December 23 ,1875 ) was a French politician and aristocrat, the member of a notablePoitou family.Biography
Although from early on connected with Legitimism, he became closely associated with the Republican
Alphonse de Lamartine , to whose paper, "Le Bien Public", he was a principal contributor. After "Le Bien Public" came to an end, he wrote for "La Presse", and in 1850 edited "Le Pays".A character sketch of Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte in this journal caused differences with Lamartine, and La Guéronnière became more and more closely identified with the policy of the prince-president. Under the Second Empire, he was a member of the "
Conseil d'État " (1853), senator (1861), ambassador toBelgium (1868), and to theOttoman Empire (1870), and Grand Officer of the Légion d'honneur (1866). He died inParis .Besides his "Études et portraits politiques contemporains" (1856) his most important works are those on the foreign policy of the Empire: "La France, Rome et Italie" (1851), "L'Abandon de Rome" (1862), "De la politique intérieure et extérieure de la France" (1862).
His elder brother, Alfred du Breuil Helion, comte de La Guéronnière (1810-1884), who remained faithful to the Legitimist party, was also a well-known writer and journalist. He was consistent in his opposition to the
July Monarchy and the Empire, but in a series of books on theFranco-Prussian War of 1870-1871 showed a more favorable attitude to theThird French Republic .References
*1911
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