George Boulanger
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Georges Ernest Jean-Marie Boulanger (29 April 1837 – 30 September 1891), nicknamed Général Revanche ("General Revenge"), was a French general and politician. An enormously popular public figure during the second decade of the Third Republic, he won multiple elections. At the zenith of his popularity in January 1889, he was feared to be powerful enough to establish himself as dictator. His base of support was the working districts of
Paris Paris () is the capital and most populous city of France, with an estimated population of 2,165,423 residents in 2019 in an area of more than 105 km² (41 sq mi), making it the 30th most densely populated city in the world in 2020. S ...
and other cities, plus rural traditionalist
Catholics The Catholic Church, also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the largest Christian church, with 1.3 billion baptized Catholics worldwide . It is among the world's oldest and largest international institutions, and has played a ...
and royalists. He promoted an aggressive
nationalism Nationalism is an idea and movement that holds that the nation should be congruent with the State (polity), state. As a movement, nationalism tends to promote the interests of a particular nation (as in a in-group and out-group, group of peo ...
, known as
revanchism Revanchism (french: revanchisme, from ''revanche'', "revenge") is the political manifestation of the will to reverse territorial losses incurred by a country, often following a war or social movement. As a term, revanchism originated in 1870s Fr ...
, which opposed Germany and called for the defeat of the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71) to be avenged. The elections of September 1889 marked a decisive defeat for the Boulangists. Changes in the electoral laws prevented Boulanger from running in multiple constituencies and the aggressive opposition of the established government, combined with Boulanger's self-imposed exile, contributed to a rapid decline of the movement. The decline of Boulanger severely undermined the political strength of the conservative and royalist elements of French political life; they would not recover strength until the establishment of the
Vichy regime Vichy France (french: Régime de Vichy; 10 July 1940 – 9 August 1944), officially the French State ('), was the fascist French state headed by Marshal Philippe Pétain during World War II. Officially independent, but with half of its terr ...
in 1940. The defeat of the Boulangists ushered in a period of political dominance by the Opportunist Republicans. Academics have attributed the failure of the movement to Boulanger's own weaknesses. Despite his charisma, he lacked coolness, consistency, and decisiveness; he was a mediocre leader who lacked vision and courage. He was never able to unite the disparate elements, ranging from the far left to the far right, that formed the base of his support. He was able, however, to frighten Republicans and force them to reorganize and strengthen their solidarity in opposition to him.


Early life and career

Boulanger was born on 29 April 1837 in Rennes, Brittany. He was the youngest of three children born to Ernest Boulanger (1805–1884), a lawyer in Bourg-des-Comptes, and Mary-Ann Webb Griffith (1804–1894), born in Bristol to a Welsh people, Welsh aristocratic family. His brother Ernest Foreign enlistment in the American Civil War, enlisted in the Union Army and was killed in action during the American Civil War. Boulanger graduated from École Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr, Saint-Cyr and entered regular service in the French Imperial Army in 1856. He fought in the Austro-Sardinian War (he was wounded at Robecchetto con Induno, where he received the ''Légion d'honneur''), and in the occupation of Cochinchina, after which he became a Captain (land), captain and Drill instructor, instructor at Saint-Cyr. During the Franco-Prussian War, Georges Boulanger was noted for his bravery, and soon promoted to ''Major, chef de bataillon''; he was again wounded while fighting at Champigny-sur-Marne (during the Siege of Paris (1870-1871), Siege of Paris). Subsequently, Boulanger was among the Third Republic military leaders who crushed the Paris Commune in April–May 1871. He was wounded a third time as he led troops to the siege of the Panthéon, Paris, Panthéon, and was promoted ''commandeur'' of the ''Légion d'honneur'' by Patrice MacMahon, duc de Magenta, Patrice MacMahon. However, he was soon demoted (as his position was considered provisional), and his resignation in protest was rejected. With backing from his direct superior, Henri d'Orléans, duc d'Aumale (incidentally, one of the sons of former King Louis-Philippe of France, Louis-Philippe), Boulanger was made a brigadier general (France), brigadier-general in 1880, and in 1882 List of Defense Ministers of France, War Minister Jean-Baptiste Billot appointed him director of infantry at the war office, enabling him to make a name as a military reformer (he took measures to improve morale and efficiency). In 1884 he was appointed to command the army occupying Tunis, but was recalled owing to his differences of opinion with Pierre-Paul Cambon, the political resident. He returned to
Paris Paris () is the capital and most populous city of France, with an estimated population of 2,165,423 residents in 2019 in an area of more than 105 km² (41 sq mi), making it the 30th most densely populated city in the world in 2020. S ...
, and began to take part in politics under the aegis of Georges Clemenceau and the Liberalism and radicalism in France, Radicals. In January 1886, when Charles de Freycinet was brought into power, Clemenceau used his influence to secure Boulanger's appointment as War Minister (replacing Jean-Baptiste Campenon). Clemenceau assumed Boulanger was a republican, because he was known not to attend Mass (liturgy), Mass. However Boulanger would soon prove himself a conservative and monarchist.Charles Sowerwine (2001). ''France Since 1870''. pp. 60–62


Minister of War

It was in the capacity of Minister of War that Boulanger gained most popularity. He introduced reforms for the benefit of soldiers (such as Facial hair in the military, allowing soldiers to grow beards) and appealed to the French desire for revenge against German Empire, Imperial Germany—in doing so, he came to be regarded as the man destined to serve that revenge (nicknamed ''Général Revanche''). He also managed to quell the major workers' Strike action, strike in Decazeville. A minor scandal arose when Philippe, comte de Paris, the nominal inheritor of the French throne in the eyes of Orléanist monarchists, married his daughter Amélie of Orléans, Amélie to Portugal's Carlos I of Portugal, Carlos I, in a lavish wedding that provoked fears of anti-Republican ambitions. The French parliament hastily passed a law expelling all possible claimants to the crown from French territories. Boulanger communicated to d'Aumale his expulsion from the armed forces. He received the adulation of the public and the press after the Sino-French War, when France's victory added Tonkin to its French colonial empire, colonial empire. He also vigorously pressed for the accelerated adoption, in just first five months of 1886, of a new rifle for the technically revolutionary smokeless powder Poudre B developed by Paul Marie Eugène Vieille, P. Vielle two years earlier. Essentially, that backfired: hastily developed 8×50mmR Lebel cartridge became an unprecedented high-velocity ammunition but due to its double taper and rim handicapped French firearm development for decades to come, and hastily designed Lebel Model 1886 rifle, essentially a strengthened Kropatschek rifle from late 1870s, became morally obsolete much faster than any of the magazine rifles of other European militaries that followed during late 1880s and 1890s (before Boulanger, the French military planned to adopt a much more modern design as well). Boulanger also ordered to produce a million rifles by May 1887, but his proposal how to achieve that was entirely unrealistic (with the best efforts in manufacturing it took several years). On Freycinet's defeat in December of the same year, Boulanger was retained by René Goblet at the war office. Confident of political support, the general began provoking the Germans; he ordered military facilities to be built in the border region of Belfort, forbade the export of horses to German markets, and even instigated a ban on presentations of ''Lohengrin (opera), Lohengrin''. Germany responded by calling to arms more than 70,000 reservists in February 1887. After the Schnaebele incident (April 1887), war was averted, but Boulanger was perceived by his supporters as coming out on top against Otto von Bismarck, Bismarck. For the Goblet government, Boulanger was an embarrassment and risk, and became engaged in a dispute with Foreign Minister Émile Flourens. On 17 May Goblet was voted out of office and replaced by Maurice Rouvier. The latter sacked Boulanger, and replaced him with on 30 May.


The rise of ''Boulangisme''

The government was astonished by the revelation that Boulanger had received around 100,000 votes for the partial election in Seine (département), Seine, without even being a candidate. He was removed from the Paris region and sent to the provinces, appointed commander of the troops stationed in Clermont-Ferrand. Upon his departure on 8 July, a crowd of ten thousand took the Gare de Lyon by storm, covering his train with posters titled ''Il reviendra'' ("He will come back"), and blocking the railway, but he was smuggled out. The general decided to gather support for his own movement, an eclectic one that capitalized on the frustrations of French conservatism, advocating the three principles of ''Revanche'' (Revenge on Germany), ''Révision'' (Revision of the Constitution), ''Bourbon Restoration in France, Restauration'' (the return to monarchy). The common reference to it has become ''Boulangisme'', a term used by its partisans and adversaries alike. Immediately, the new popular movement was backed by notable conservative figures such as Count Arthur Dillon (1834–1922), Arthur Dillon, Alfred Joseph Naquet, Anne de Rochechouart de Mortemart (Viscounts and Dukes of Uzès, Duchess of Uzès, who financed him with immense sums), Arthur Meyer (journalist), Arthur Meyer, Paul Déroulède (and his ''Ligue des Patriotes''). After the political corruption scandal surrounding the President of the French Republic, President's son-in-law Daniel Wilson, who was secretly selling ''Légion d'honneur'' medals to anyone who wanted, the Republican government was brought into disrepute and Boulanger's popular appeal rose in contrast. His position became essential after President Jules Grévy was forced to resign due to the scandal: in January 1888, the ''boulangistes'' promised to back any candidate for the presidency that would in turn offer his support to Boulanger for the post of War Minister (France was a Parliamentary system, parliamentary republic). The crisis was cut short by the election of Marie François Sadi Carnot and the appointment of Pierre Tirard as List of Prime Ministers of France, Prime Minister—Tirard refused to include Boulanger in his cabinet. During the period, Boulanger was in Switzerland, where he met with Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte II, technically a Bonapartist, who offered his full support to the cause. The Bonapartists had attached themselves to the general, and even the Comte de Paris encouraged his followers to support him. Once seen as a republican, Boulanger showed his true colors in the camp of the conservative monarchists. On 26 March 1888 he was expelled from the army. The day after, Daniel Wilson had his imprisonment repealed. It seemed to the French people that honorable generals were punished while corrupt politicians were spared, further increasing Boulanger's popularity. Although he was not in fact a legal candidate for the French Chamber of Deputies (since he was a military man), Boulanger ran with Bonapartist backing in seven separate ''Département in France, départements'' during the remainder of 1888. ''Boulangiste'' candidates were present in every ''département''. Consequently, he and many of his supporters were voted to the Chamber, and accompanied by a large crowd on 12 July, the day of their swearing in—the general himself was elected in the constituency of Nord (département), Nord. The ''boulangistes'' were, nonetheless, a minority in the Chamber. Since Boulanger could not pass legislation, his actions were directed to maintaining his public image. Neither his failure as an orator nor his defeat in a duel with Charles Thomas Floquet, then an elderly civilian and the minister of the interior, reduced the enthusiasm of his popular following. During 1888 his personality was the dominating feature of French politics, and, when he resigned his seat as a protest against the reception given by the Chamber to his proposals, constituencies vied with one another in selecting him as their representative. His name was the theme of the popular song ''C'est Boulanger qu'il nous faut'' ("Boulanger is the One We Need"), he and his black horse became the idol of the Parisian population, and he was urged to run for the presidency. The general agreed, but his personal ambitions soon alienated his republican supporters, who recognised in him a potential Military dictatorship, military dictator. Numerous monarchists continued to give him financial aid, even though Boulanger saw himself as a leader rather than a restorer of kings.


Downfall

In January 1889, he ran as a deputy for Paris, and, after an intense campaign, took the seat with 244,000 votes against the 160,000 of his main adversary. A ''coup d'état'' seemed probable and desirable among his supporters. Boulanger had now become a threat to the parliamentary Republic. Had he immediately placed himself at the head of a revolt he might have effected the coup which many of his partisans had worked for, and might even have governed France; but the opportunity passed with his procrastination on 27 January. According to Lady Randolph Churchill "[a]ll his thoughts were centered in and controlled by her who was the mainspring of his life. After the plebiscite...he rushed off to Marguerite Crouzet, Madame Bonnemain's house and could not be found". Boulanger decided that it would be better to contest the general election and take power legally. This, however, gave his enemies the time they needed to strike back. Ernest Constans, the Minister of the Interior (France), Minister of the Interior, decided to investigate the matter, and attacked the ''Ligue des Patriotes'' using the law banning the activities of Secret society, secret societies. Shortly afterward the French government issued a warrant for Boulanger's arrest for conspiracy (political), conspiracy and treasonable activity. To the astonishment of his supporters, on 1 April he fled Paris before it could be executed, going first to Brussels and then to London. On 4 April the Parliament stripped him of his Parliamentary immunity, immunity from prosecution; the French Senate condemned him and his supporters, Victor Henri Rochefort, Marquis de Rochefort-Luçay, Rochefort, and Arthur Dillon (1834–1922), Count Dillon for treason, sentencing all three to Penal transportation, deportation and confinement. In 1890 ''Le Figaro'' caused a sensation by alleging that Boulanger's London promoter Alexander Meyrick Broadley had taken Boulanger and Rochefort to the male brothel at the centre of the Cleveland Street Scandal, an allegation that Dillon was forced to publicly deny.


Death

After his flight, support for him dwindled, and the Boulangists were defeated in the 1889 French legislative election, general elections of July 1889 (after the government forbade Boulanger from running). Boulanger himself went to live in Jersey before returning to the Ixelles Cemetery in Brussels in September 1891 to kill himself with a bullet to the head on the grave of his mistress, Madame de Bonnemains (née Marguerite Brouzet) who had died in his arms the preceding July. He was buried in the same grave.


The Boulangist movement

Marxist historians viewed the Boulangist movement as a Proto-fascism, proto-fascist right-wing movement. A number of scholars have presented boulangism as a precursor of fascism, including Zeev Sternhell and Stanley G. Payne, Stanley Payne. France's right was based in the old aristocracy, but this new movement was based on mass popular feeling that was national, rather than class-based. As Jacques Néré says, "Boulangism was first and foremost a popular movement of the extreme left". Irvine says he had some royalist support but that, "Boulangism is better understood as the coalescence of the fragmented forces of the Left." This interpretation is part of a consensus that France's radical right was formed in part during the Dreyfus affair, Dreyfus era by men who had been Boulangist partisans of the radical left a decade earlier. Boulanger gained the support of a number of former Communards from the Paris Commune and some supporters of Blanquism (a faction within the Central Revolutionary Committee). This included men such as Victor Jaclard, Ernest Granger and Henri Rochefort.


In popular culture

Général Boulanger inspired the Jean Renoir movie ''Elena and Her Men'', a musical fantasy loosely based on the end of his political career. The role of ''Général François Rollan'', a Boulanger-like character, was played by Jean Marais. IMDb notes that there was also a French television programme about Boulanger in the early 1980s, ''La Nuit du général Boulanger'' where Boulanger is played by Maurice Ronet. He is quoted as the one who authorised the institution of the "Suicide Bureau" in Guy de Maupassant's short story "The Magic Couch", reportedly "the only good thing he did". Maurice Leblanc also mentions him in his 1924 novel ''The Countess of Cagliostro''.


References


Further reading

* D. W. Brogan. ''France under the Republic: The development of modern France (1870–1939)'' (1940) pp 183–216 * Michael Burns, ''Rural Society and French Politics, Boulangism and the Dreyfus Affair, 1886–1900'' (Princeton University Press, 1984) * Patrick Hutton, "The Impact of the Boulangist Crisis on the Guesdist Party at Bordeaux," ''French Historical Studies'', vol. 7, no. 2, 1973, pp. 226–44
in JSTOR
* Patrick Hutton, "Popular Boulangism and the Advent of Mass Politics in France, 1886–90," ''Journal of Contemporary History'', vol. 11, no. 1, 1976, pp. 85–106.
in JSTOR
* William D. Irvine, "French Royalists and Boulangism,"''French Historical Studies''Vol. 15, No. 3 (Spring, 1988), pp. 395–40
in JSTOR
* William D. Irvine, ''The Boulanger Affair Reconsidered, Royalism, Boulangism, and the Origins of the Radical Right in France'', (Oxford University Press, 1989) * Jean-Marie Mayeur and Madeleine Rebérioux ''The Third Republic from its Origins to the Great War, 1871 – 1914'' (1984) pp 125–37 * René Rémond, ''The Right Wing in France from 1815 to de Gaulle'', translated by James M. Laux, 2nd American ed. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1969. * John Roberts, "General Boulanger" ''History Today'' ( Oct 1955) 5#10 pp 657–669, online * Peter M. Rutkoff, ''Revanche and Revision, The Ligue des Patriotes and the Origins of the Radical Right in France, 1882–1900'', Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 1981. * Frederic Seager, ''The Boulanger Affair, Political Crossroads of France, 1886–1889'', Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1969.


French studies

* Adrien Dansette, ''Le Boulangisme, De Boulanger à la Révolution Dreyfusienne, 1886–1890'', Paris: Libraire Academique Perrin, 1938. * Raoul Girardet, ''Le Nationalisme français, 1871–1914'', Paris: A. Colin, 1966. * Jacques Néré, ''Le Boulangisme et la Presse'', Paris: A. Colin, 1964. * Odile Rudelle, ''La République Absolue, Aux origines de l'instabilité constitutionelle de la France républicaine, 1870–1889'', Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne, 1982. * Zeev Sternhell, ''La Droite Révolutionnaire, 1885–1914; Les Origines Françaises du Fascisme'', Paris: Gallimard, 1997.


External links

*
''Le boulangisme''
*

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Boulanger, Georges 1837 births 1891 deaths 19th-century coups d'état and coup attempts Burials at Ixelles Cemetery Commandeurs of the Légion d'honneur French duellists French generals French Ministers of War French monarchists French people of Welsh descent French politicians who committed suicide Members of the Ligue des Patriotes Military personnel from Rennes Politicians of the French Third Republic Suicides by firearm in Belgium Politicians from Rennes