Frédéric Taulier

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Frédéric Taulier

Frédéric Taulier (born December 15, 1806 in Grenoble , † January 22, 1861 ibid) was a French lawyer and professor and two-time mayor of Grenoble.

Life

Taulier studied law at the University of Grenoble , where he in August 1828 to the doctor of law doctorate . After three years of practical work in Paris , he settled in Grenoble in 1831 as a lawyer. Shortly thereafter, at the age of just 32, he was appointed to a chair in civil law .

On February 16, 1845 he was appointed mayor of Grenoble by royal decree. During his first term as mayor, the city's archaeological museum was established in 1846 and the city fortifications were completed the following year. In the course of the February Revolution of 1848 , Taulier resigned as mayor on February 28, 1848.

A few months after Louis Napoleon Bonaparte was elected President of the Republic , Taulier was reappointed Mayor of Grenoble on April 2, 1849.

Others

Frédéric Taulier was a Knight of the Legion of Honor and was buried in La Tronche .

A street in Grenoble bears his name in his honor.

Publications

  • Théorie raisonnée du Code civil, Grenoble and Paris 1840 - 1848 (several volumes)
  • Le vrai livre du peuple, ou, Le riche et le pauvre - histoire des institutions de bienfaisance et d'instruction primaire de la ville de Grenoble, Grenoble and Paris 1860

literature

  • Jules de Beylié: Frédéric Taulier. Ancien maire de la ville de Grenoble Rajon et Cie, Grenoble 1896.

Individual evidence