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- Q3103015 subject Q6646293.
- Q3103015 subject Q6936472.
- Q3103015 subject Q8654501.
- Q3103015 subject Q8771971.
- Q3103015 abstract "Jean Henri Georges Laguerre (June 24, 1858 - June 17, 1912) was a French lawyer and politician.Born in Paris, he was called to the bar in 1879 and distinguished himself by brilliant pleadings in favour of socialist and anarchist leaders, defending Prince Kropotkine at Lyon in 1883, Louise Michel in the same year. In 1886, with Alexandre Millerand as colleague he defended Ernest Roche and Duc Quercy, the instigators of the Decazeville strike. His strictures on the procureur de la Republique on this occasion being declared libellous he was suspended for six months and in 1890 he again incurred suspension for an attack on the attorney-general, Quesnay de Beaurepaire.He pleaded in the greatest criminal cases of his time, but from 1893 onwards exclusively in the provinces, his exclusion from the Parisian bar having been secured on the pretext of his connection with La Presse. He entered the Chamber of Deputies for Apt in 1883 as a representative of the extreme revisionist programme, and was one of the leaders of the Boulangist agitation. He had formerly written for Georges Clemenceau's organ La Justice, but when Clemenceau refused to impose any shibboleth on the radical party he became director of La Presse. He rallied to the republican party in May 1891 some months before General Boulanger's suicide. He was not re-elected to the Chamber in 1893.Laguerre was an excellent lecturer on the revolutionary period of French history, concerning which he had collected many valuable and rare documents. He interested himself in the fate of the "Little Dauphin" (Louis XVII), whose supposed remains, buried at Ste Marguerite, proved to be those of a boy of fourteen.".
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q142.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q17015569.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q171730.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q191783.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q192883.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q216092.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q274540.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q315747.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q40348.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q456.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q4720797.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q49765.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q5752.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q591281.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q6646293.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q6936472.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q82955.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q840625.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q8654501.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q8771971.
- Q3103015 wikiPageWikiLink Q90.
- Q3103015 comment "Jean Henri Georges Laguerre (June 24, 1858 - June 17, 1912) was a French lawyer and politician.Born in Paris, he was called to the bar in 1879 and distinguished himself by brilliant pleadings in favour of socialist and anarchist leaders, defending Prince Kropotkine at Lyon in 1883, Louise Michel in the same year. In 1886, with Alexandre Millerand as colleague he defended Ernest Roche and Duc Quercy, the instigators of the Decazeville strike.".
- Q3103015 label "Jean Henri Georges Laguerre".