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  1. 30 de may. de 2024 · Quick Reference. (1863–1944) French statesman; prime minister (1911–12) and five times minister of finance. Born in Le Mans, the son of a former government minister, Caillaux was educated at the Lycée Condorcet in Paris before entering the civil service as an inspector of finance in 1882. Caillaux was first elected as a radical-socialist ...

  2. Joseph Caillaux, né au Mans le 30 mars 1863 et mort à Mamers le 21 novembre 1944, est un homme politique français. Disciple de Pierre Waldeck-Rousseau , il commence sa carrière politique parmi les républicains modérés , adhérant à l' Alliance républicaine démocratique à sa création, en 1901.

  3. 16 de mar. de 2017 · Gaston Calmette, editor of the leading Conservative newspaper Le Figaro, threatened to publicize love letters between the former Prime Minister and his second wife, written while both were still married for the first time. Henriette Cailloux was not amused. On March 16, 1914, Madame Cailloux took a taxi to the offices of Le Figaro.

  4. Gueydan, the mistress who later became his first wife (Henriette was his second). The letter contained evidence of political double-dealing on Joseph's part and ended with an embarrassingly amorous closing, "Ton Jo" ("Your Joey"). By reproducing this document, the editor Calmette added ridicule to his trumped-up outrage against Joseph Caillaux.

  5. The shooter was Henriette Caillaux, the second wife of Joseph Caillaux, who had been the prime minister of France from June 1911 to January 1912. She believed her target, Gaston Calmette, the editor of Le Figaro, was about to expose the intimate secrets of her marriage. Venomous politics lay behind l’affaire Caillaux.

  6. On March 16th, the wife of the minister of Finance, Joseph Caillaux, walked into the editorial offices of the newspaper Le Figaro. She calmly shot and killed the paper’s editor Gaston Calmette. Calmette had recently launched fierce personal attacks on her husband’s integrity in the pages of the widely-read journal.

  7. Joseph Caillaux (born March 30, 1863, Le Mans, France—died Nov. 22, 1944, Mamers) was a French statesman who was an early supporter of a national income tax and whose opposition to World War I led to his imprisonment for treason in 1920. The son of Eugène Caillaux, who was twice a conservative minister (1874–75 and 1877), he obtained his ...