Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 26 de mar. de 2024 · 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 ...

  2. 23 de ago. de 2013 · Culture; Histoire; Joseph Caillaux, l'homme qui a inventé l'impôt sur le revenu. D'une rare compétence financière, il est nommé en 1899, ministre des Finances.

  3. Fils d'Eugène, Alexandre Caillaux (1822-1896), représentant de la Sarthe à l’Assemblée nationale de 1871 à 1876 et sénateur de la Sarthe de 1876 à 1882, Joseph Caillaux, qui siégea presque sans interruption au Parlement de 1898 à 1944 et qui joua un rôle considérable dans la vie politique française au cours de certaines de ses périodes les plus critiques, fut l'une des ...

  4. Three years later, in 1938, Caillaux supported Edouard Daladier in his attempts to negotiate an agreement with the Nazis under Hitler . With the failure of these Caillaux retired from politics, declining to re-emerge at the invitation of the Vichy government. Joseph Caillaux died in Mamers on 22 November 1944 at the age of 81.

  5. 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.

  6. Born Henriette Rainouard; died in 1943; second wife of Joseph Caillaux (1863–1944, member of chamber of deputies, premier of France [1911–1912], French minister of finance). In March 1914, as France teetered on the brink of war with Germany, Le Figaro 's editor, Gaston Calmette, continued his two-month campaign against France's minister of ...

  7. Joseph Caillaux, a notorious boulevardier, had sent the letter 13 years before the trial to another woman, who later became his first wife, and it had been leaked to Figaro. Political and social mores, the Napoleonic Code that discriminated against women legally and the venality of the press all came together in the affaire Caillaux.