Knowledge (XXG)

Henri-Auguste Lozé

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When in 1893 major riots broke out in Paris after a confrontation between a student called Nuger and a policeman that resulted in Nuger suffering a fatal wound, there was widespread public concern that the governance of Paris and ultimately the French Republic was being endangered by the increasing
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Riots that took place in July 1893 arose out of a seemingly trivial incident involving the arrest of an actress Sarah Brown, a student called Nuger and a confrontation with a policeman, the consequence of which was the death of Nuger. On the following Monday, 1,000 demonstrators marched onto the
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Chamber of Deputies, determined to be provided with an adequate explanation. By the end of the day barricades were erected around the district of the Boulevard St. Germain and Paris seemed on the brink of revolution.
305:. In April 1891, under orders from the Minister of the Interior, Lozé seized and destroyed hundreds of posters considered to be a violation of public decency. Many artists and their printers were charged. Several of 333:
but though he was named in the post he declined to take the job on a permanent basis preferring a low key post in the Ministry of the Interior. He was replaced in Algeria once again by Louis Lépine.
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securities that favoured distillers and speaking in favour of increased decentralisation of powers to the communes. On 3 July he voted against the bill separating the church from the state.
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Lozé served from 1886 to 1888 as Préfet de la Somme and from 1888 until 1893 held the politically charged post of Préfet de police de Paris succeeding the future Prime Minister of France
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public disorder in the Capital. Lozé was heavily criticised for perceived inaction during the disturbances and on 11 July he was replaced as Prefect of Police by the authoritarian
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in the National Assembly. His political actions during this period were compatible with a man of libertarian and liberal inclinations. He is recorded as opposing the
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In 1906 after a close fought election Lozé was elected to the Senate where he served until his death in 1915. Lozé was a Commander (
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and embarked on a career as a lawyer and public administrator that took in provincial postings that included deputy prefectures at
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who is credited with restoring order and subsequently implementing the reforms required for policing a Modern French state.
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department near the French border with Belgium. His father is described as an industrialist and mayor. He studied law at
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a position he held for four years until 1897. In September of that year he served as the temporary Governor-General of
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http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2014/russian-works-art-faberge-icons-l14113/lot.636.html
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was a French politician who was Prefect of Police (Préfet de Police) for Paris from 1888 to 1893, a
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Unfit for public display: female sexuality and the censorship of fin‐de‐siècle publicity posters
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https://francearchives.fr/facomponent/a1d81d1f79701d961a17b89d3a53ff71e4ac1944
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https://francearchives.fr/facomponent/a1d81d1f79701d961a17b89d3a53ff71e4ac1944
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Dictionnaire biographique des préfets – septembre 1870 a mai 1982
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Frédéric Guéau de Reverseauxe de Rouvray, Marquis de Reverseauxé
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Watch Gift from Alexander III to Lozé for Sale with Sotheby's.
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France National Archives (Portail National Des Archives)
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France National Archives (Portail National Des Archives)
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Index

Lozé

Préfet de Police
Léon Bourgeois
Louis Lépine
Ambassadors of France to Austria
Albert Decrais
Governor General of Algeria
Jules Cambon
Louis Lépine
Le Cateau-Cambrésis
Paris
Fédération républicaine
French
French
Le Cateau-Cambrésis
Nord
Collège Sainte-Barbe
Commercy
Béthune
Brest
prefect
Cantal
Léon Bourgeois
nihilist
Alexander III of Russia
Alfred Choubrac
Louis Lépine
Vienna
Algeria

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