1897 in France

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1897
in
France

Decades:
  • 1870s
  • 1880s
  • 1890s
  • 1900s
  • 1910s
See also:Other events of 1897
History of France  • Timeline  • Years

Events from the year 1897 in France.

Incumbents[]

Events[]

  • 4 May – Bazar de la Charité Fire.
  • 9 December – First issue of the feminist newspaper La Fronde is published[3] by Marguerite Durand.
  • Alexandre Darracq begins manufacture of motor vehicles at A. Darracq et Cie in the Paris suburb of Suresnes.

Arts and literature[]

  • At Giverny, Claude Monet begins painting his Water Lilies series, which will continue until the end of his life.
  • 28 December – The play Cyrano de Bergerac, by Edmond Rostand, premieres in Paris.

Births[]

January to June[]

  • 21 January – René Iché, sculptor (died 1954)
  • 30 March – Raymond Borderie, film producer (died 1982)
  • 4 April – Pierre Fresnay, actor (died 1975)
  • 1 May – Aimée Antoinette Camus, botanist (died 1965)
  • 27 May – Lucien Cailliet, composer, conductor, arranger and clarinetist (died 1985)

July to September[]

  • 3 July – Charles Tillon, politician (died 1993)
  • 25 July – André Muffang, chess master (died 1989)
  • 2 August – Philippe Soupault, poet, novelist, critic and political activist (died 1990)
  • 19 August – Norbert Casteret, caver and adventurer (died 1987)
  • 10 September – Georges Bataille, writer (died 1962)
  • 12 September
  • 13 September – Michel Saint-Denis, actor, theatre director, and drama theorist (died 1971)

October to December[]

  • 3 October – Louis Aragon, poet and novelist (died 1982)
  • 16 October – Louis de Cazenave, at the time of his death, the oldest French poilu still alive (died 2008)
  • 18 October – Martha Desrumeaux, militant communist and member of the French Resistance (died 1982)
  • 24 November – François Ducaud-Bourget, priest (died 1984)
  • 27 November – André Couder, optician and astronomer (died 1979)
  • 3 December – André Marie, politician and Prime Minister of France (died 1974)
  • 7 December – Lazare Ponticelli, last surviving official French veteran of the First World War (died 2008)
  • 19 December – Louis Darquier de Pellepoix, Commissioner for Jewish Affairs under the Vichy Régime (died 1980)
  • 20 December – Jacques de Bernonville, collaborationist and senior police officer in the Vichy regime (died 1972)
  • 25 December – Noël Delberghe, water polo player and Olympic medallist (died 1965)

Undated[]

Deaths[]

  • 13 January – Charles Brun, naval engineer (born 1821)
  • 20 March – Augustin Marie Morvan, physician, politician and writer (born 1819)
  • 18 May – François-Louis Français, painter (born 1814)
  • 30 May – Jeanne Sylvanie Arnould-Plessy, actress (born 1819)
  • 19 June – Louis Brière de l'Isle, Military officer and colonial governor (born 1827)
  • 5 July – Edmond-Frederic Le Blant, archaeologist and historian (born 1818)
  • 6 July – Henri Meilhac, dramatist and opera librettist (born 1830)
  • 20 September – Louis Pierre Mouillard, aeronautical engineer (born 1834)
  • 30 September – Thérèse de Lisieux, Roman Catholic Carmelite nun, canonised as a saint (born 1873)
  • 6 November – Edouard Deldevez, violinist, conductor and composer (born 1817)
  • 14 November – Thomas W. Evans, dentist (born 1823 in the United States)[4]
  • 28 November – Léonard-Léopold Forgemol de Bostquénard, general (born 1821)
  • 6 December – Oscar Bardi de Fourtou, politician (born 1836)
  • 16 December – Alphonse Daudet, novelist (born 1840)

References[]

  1. ^ "Félix Faure - president of France". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
  2. ^ "Félix-Jules Méline - premier of France". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
  3. ^ Offen, Karen (2018). Debating the Woman Question in the French Third Republic, 1870-1920. Cambridge University Press. p. 175. ISBN 9781107188044.
  4. ^ Johnson, Rossiter; Brown, John Howard, eds. (1904), "Thomas William Evans", The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, vol. 4, Boston, MA: The Biographical Society, retrieved 2009-06-12.
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