*** Welcome to piglix ***

Démosthène Ollivier

Démosthène Ollivier
Démosthène Ollivier.jpg
Démosthène Ollivier c. 1848
Born (1799-02-25)25 February 1799
Toulon, Var, France
Died 22 April 1884(1884-04-22) (aged 85)
Saint-Tropez, Var, France
Nationality French
Occupation Businessman, politician

Démosthène Ollivier (25 February 1799 – 22 April 1884) was a French businessman and politician. He was a staunch democrat and Republican, and was opposed to the Bourbon Restoration and the monarchy of Louis Philippe I. In the 1830s he was a friend of the Italian nationalist politician Giuseppe Mazzini. He was elected to the Constituent Assembly after the revolution of 1848. He protested the 1851 coup by Prince Louis Napoleon, and was forced into exile. His son Émile Ollivier became a prominent politician, and Démosthène Ollivier was allowed to return to France in 1860.

Démosthène Ollivier was born in Toulon, Var on 25 February 1799. He entered commerce at a young age, and headed a trading house in Marseille dealing in fabrics. Démosthène Ollivier held democratic views, and was opposed to the Bourbon Restoration (1814–30). In 1822 Ollivier was denounced for having taken part in a plot against the monarchy, was arrested and condemned to six months in prison and a fine. Ollivier married Marie Geneviève Claire Perie. Their son Émile Ollivier was born in Marseille on 8 July 1825. Démosthène Ollivier was against the monarchy of Louis Philippe I (r, 1830–48).

Giuseppe Mazzini stayed with the Ollivier family in the early 1830s. In August 1832 Mazzini's close friend Giuditta Bellerio Sidoli gave birth to a boy, almost certainly Mazzini's son, whom she named Joseph Démosthène Adolpe Aristide after members of the Ollivier family. The Olliviers took care of the child in June 1833 when Giuditta and Mazzini left for Switzerland. The child died in February 1835. Ollivier became a municipal counselor in Marseille in 1836. His business ran into difficulty and went bankrupt, which compromised his political career. However, through relentless effort he was able to fulfill his obligations and obtain his rehabilitation. He left Marseille and moved to Paris, where he lived quietly and raised his large family.

After the February Revolution of 1848 Démosthène Ollivier had his 23-year-old son Émile Ollivier named commissary-general of the Republic in Marseille. Démosthène Ollivier was elected on 23 April 1848 to represent Bouches-du-Rhône in the Constituent Assembly. In the opening session on 4 May 1848 he asked that the oath to the Republic be delivered individually to the tribune. What that was refused, he asked that the minutes record that our acclamation of the Republic was made unanimously. The whole assembly rose in assent to this motion. Ollivier became a member of the commerce committee. He voted with the most advanced faction of the Republican Party.


...
Wikipedia

...