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The French Second Republic (French: Deuxième République Française or La II e République), officially the French Republic (République française), was the second republican government of France. It existed from 1848 until its dissolution in 1852.
He retired in 1995 after the conclusion of his second term. He was the first left-wing President of the Fifth Republic; his presidential tenure was the longest of any French Republic. 22 Jacques Chirac (1932–2019) 17 May 1995 16 May 2007 11 years, 364 days Rally for the Republic (until 2002) Union for a Popular Movement (from 2002) 1995, 2002
NºPortraitName (birth–death)Term Of Office2Adolphe Thiers [9] (1797–1877)31 August 187124 May 18733Patrice de MacMahon [10] (1808–1893)24 May 187330 January 18794Jules Grévy [11] (1807–1891)30 January 18792 December 18875Sadi Carnot [12] (1837–1894)3 December 188725 June 1894 †Second Republic, (1848–52) French republic established after the Revolution of 1848 toppled the July monarchy of King Louis-Philippe. (The first French republic had been formed during the French Revolution.) The liberal republicans’ hopes of establishing an enduring democratic regime were soon.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
The Second Republic, 1848–52. The succession to the throne was not to be decided so easily, however. The Chamber of Deputies, invaded by a crowd that demanded a republic, set up a provisional government whose members ranged from constitutional monarchists to one radical deputy, Alexandre-Auguste Ledru-Rollin.
Discover the biographies of the twenty-five people who served as President of the French Republic, from the 2nd to the 5th Republic.
Louis Napoleon Bonaparte was elected president on December 10, 1848, by a landslide; his support came from a wide section of the French public. Because of the ambiguity surrounding Louis Napoleon’s political positions, his agenda as president was very much in doubt.
Abstract. This chapter is an overview of the short-lived Second Republic. Historians had previously treated France's shortest republic as something of an embarrassment, lamenting that the Revolution of 1848 and its aftermath marked a “turning point that didn't turn”—an episode that revealed the French people's inability, at midcentury, to ...