Auguste de Tallenay

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Auguste-Bonaventure Marquis de Tallenay (* 1795 in Besançon , † 1863 in Munich ) was a French diplomat .

Life

Tallenay came from an eastern French aristocratic family and from 1828 went through a diplomatic career as legation secretary at the embassies in Stockholm , Brussels and Rome . In October 1838 he was appointed French Minister-Resident at the Hanseatic cities based in Hamburg ; from 1845 in the title and rank of extraordinary envoy and plenipotentiary minister .

Under Foreign Minister Alphonse de Lamartine he was appointed ambassador to the court of St. James in London on April 14, 1848 by the provisional French government of the Second Republic , but was not accredited by the British . In August 1848 Tallenay was finally transferred to the French envoy to the German Bundestag in Frankfurt am Main , where he took over the post of French envoy to the newly formed, short-lived German federal state from 1848/1849 from September 5, 1848 to December 20, 1849 . After its restoration, he remained as envoy to the German Confederation until 1855.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Johann Martin Lappenberg : Journal of the Association for Hamburg History . Association for Hamburg History , Hamburg 1851 ( online ).
  2. ^ A b Tobias C. Bringmann: Handbuch der Diplomatie, 1815-1963: Foreign Heads of Mission in Germany and German Heads of Mission abroad from Metternich to Adenauer . KG Saur, Munich 2012, p. 185 .
  3. ^ Benjamin Disraeli, John Alexander Wilson Gunn: Benjamin Disraeli Letters, Volume 5 . University of Toronto Press, Toronto 1993, pp. 56 ( online ).
  4. Ministère des affaires étrangères : Annuaire diplomatique et consulaire de la République française . Paris 1906.
predecessor Office successor
Edouard Burignot de Varenne French envoy to the Hanseatic cities from
1838 to 1848
Louis Gustave Bernard des Essarts, Gt
Joseph Savoye , Gt French envoy to the German federal state from
1848 to 1849
-
Justin de Chasseloup-Laubat (until 1848) French envoy to the German Confederation from
1849 to 1855
Gustave de Montessuy