Roger Maugras

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

François Émile Roger Maugras (born October 10, 1881 in Le Plessis-Hébert , Département Eure , † 1963 ) was a French diplomat .

Life

Roger Maugras was a son of Gaston Maugras (1850-1927), historian, and Marie Cécile Bapst (* 1858), a niece of the Ambassador Edmond Bapst . His brother Gaston Maugras was also French. Diplomat. He studied at the École libre des sciences politiques and joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1908 .

On March 28, 1911 he was promoted to third-class embassy secretary, he was consul in Bangkok in 1913 , secretary of the embassy in Vienna in 1920, secretary of the embassy to the High Commissioner in Constantinople in 1923 , and in 1924 subdivision manager in the public relations department at the Quai d'Orsay (Foreign Ministry) in Paris .

Roger Maugras was from 1918 to April 1919, at that time Secretary, charge d'affaires ad interim in Tokyo . From 1920 to January 1922 Maugras was first-class embassy secretary in Vienna and as such was temporarily business agent. From January 1922 to 1929 he was employed in the administration of the League of Nations mandate for Syria and Lebanon . He was then sub-department head for Africa and the Levant . From 1931 to May 28, 1935 he was Ministre plénipotentiaire in Bangkok , from May 28, 1935 to June 1940, Ministre plénipotentiaire in Stockholm and from July 28, 1940 to December 1, 1940, envoy in Belgrade .

predecessor Office successor
Eugène Regnault French ambassador to Japan from
1918 to April 1919
Edmond Bapst
Pierre Lefèvre-Pontalis List of the French ambassadors in Austria
1920
Pierre Lefèvre-Pontalis
Pierre Lefèvre-Pontalis French ambassador to Thailand from
1931 to 1935
Charles Lépissier
César Rizio Campana (born August 19, 1877) List of French ambassadors in Sweden
May 28, 1935 to June 1940
Christian Carra de Vaux Saint Cyr
-17. June 1940: Raymond Brugère French ambassador to Serbia
July 28, 1940 to December 1, 1940
Henry Gauquié

Individual evidence

  1. MAUGRAS, François Emile Roger
  2. Michael S. Farbman, Europa, with which is incorporated the Europa year book , p. 529