Eli185/Charles Pomaret
Personal details
ProfessionAvocat
Journaliste
Historien
Signature
Charles Pomaret
alt=Illustration.|frameless|220x220px|Charles Pomaret en 1938.

Charles Pomaret en 1938.
Fonctions
Ministre de l'Intérieur

(Vichy)


(10 jours)
Président Albert Lebrun
Gouvernement Pétain
Prédécesseur Georges Mandel
Successeur Adrien Marquet
Ministre du Travail et de la Santé publique [N 2]


(15 jours)
Président Albert Lebrun
Gouvernement Pétain
Prédécesseur André Février
Successeur René Belin (secrétaire d'État)


(1 an, 9 mois et 24 jours)
Président Albert Lebrun
Gouvernement Daladier III

Daladier IV

Daladier V

Reynaud
Prédécesseur Paul Ramadier
Successeur André Février
Député français


(14 ans, 1 mois et 2 jours)
Élection 29 avril 1928
Réélection 8 mai 1932

3 mai 1936
Circonscription Aveyron
Législature XIVe, XVe et XVIe (Troisième République)
Groupe politique PRSSF (1928-1931)

RS (1931-1935)

RSI (1935-1936)

GDRI (1936-1940)
Biographie
Date de naissance
Lieu de naissance Montpellier (France)
Date de décès (à 87 ans)
Lieu de décès Saint-Paul-de-Vence (France)
Nationalité Français
Parti politique USR (1935-1940)
Diplômé de Université de Grenoble
Profession Avocat

Journaliste

Historien
Résidence Lozère

alt=Signature de Charles Pomaret|frameless|110x110px
Ministres français de l'Intérieur

Ministres français du Travail

Catégorie:Article utilisant une Infobox

Biography edit

Early years edit

Charles Henri Pomaret studied in Marseille. He first studied at the Saint-Charles annexe of the Lycée Thiers, which served as his secondary school, before entering the Lycée Thiers in the seconde class. After passing his baccalauréat, he went on to study at the Faculty of Law and Literature in Grenoble.

He interrupted his studies to enlist in 1915. For his conduct at the front, he was awarded the Croix de Guerre 1914-1918 with two commendations, and the officer's ribbon of the Polonia Restituta.

Once peace had returned, he resumed his studies and became the youngest Licencié ès-lettres in France. He took the competitive examination for the Conseil d'État and became its youngest auditeur, as well as being top of his class. He obtained a doctorate in law in 1922 from the University of Grenoble, with a thesis entitled "La Politique française des combustibles liquides: pétrole, charbon liquide, alcool, le carburant national".

Political career edit

A Socialist-Republican, he was elected Member of Parliament for Lozère in 1928, and became Under-Secretary of State for Technical Education between 1931 and 1932. In 1938, and until 1940, he was Minister for Labour. He combined this role with that of Minister of the Interior in 1940, becoming the last Minister of Labour and Minister of the Interior of the Third Republic. In this capacity, it was he who authorised the departure of the liner Massilia, which carried many members of parliament to North Africa. Then, on 27 June 1940, he took over the Labour portfolio from André Février, who had been appointed Minister of Communications. He left office on 12 July 1940.

In addition to his career in politics and as a lawyer, Charles Pomaret was a journalist from 1925 to 1938, serving as editor-in-chief of Renaissance politique and contributing to Le Capital, L'Ère nouvelle and Le Quotidien. He was also a political and economic writer, whose works include L'Armée à la conquête de l'Europe (1931) and La Politique française des combustibles liquides (1933).

He is a frequent arbitrator and chairman of arbitral tribunals in France and Switzerland and of the Court of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce. A specialist in French administrative law, he practises as a jurisconsult while also chairing the Nice associate centre of the Conservatoire national des arts et métiers.

Charles Pomaret died in Saint-Paul-de-Vence on 11 September 1984.

Private life edit

Charles Pomaret married Marie Paule Fontenelle, the widow of Henry Lapauze, curator of the Musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris, on 2 July 1928 in Paris.

The couple collected works of art, all of which were sold at Hôtel Drouot in Paris on 22 March 1976. The Musée d'Orsay holds a Pêcheur à la coquille (Fisherman with a Shell) painted around 1860 by Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux, which came from their collection. Charles Despiau sculpted a bust of his wife in 1932.

They divorced on 12 March 1975 and Marie Paule Fontenelle died three months later on 15 June 1975 in Neuilly-sur-Seine.

References edit

  1. ^ Ministre du Travail jusqu'au 16 juin 1940.
  2. ^ Ministre du Travail jusqu'au .

links edit

{{liens}}

  • {{DicoParlement1889}}.

{{Début dynastie}} {{Succession box}} {{Fin dynastie}}{{Palette|Ministres français du Travail|Gouvernement Pétain|Gouvernement Reynaud|Gouvernement Daladier 3,4,5|Gouvernement Laval 1,2,3}} [[Category:20th-century French journalists]] [[Category:20th-century French lawyers]] [[Category:Republican-Socialist Party politicians]] [[Category:Members of the 16th Chamber of Deputies of the French Third Republic]] [[Category:Members of the 15th Chamber of Deputies of the French Third Republic]] [[Category:Members of the 14th Chamber of Deputies of the French Third Republic]] [[Category:French interior ministers]] [[Category:French Ministers of Labour and Social Affairs]] [[Category:Articles with authority control information]]