Edmond de Tillancourt
Edmond de Tillancourt , born with Montfaucon (Aisne) the October 14th 1808, deceased in Paris the December 27th 1880, and buried with Castle-Thierry.
Deputy of Aisne.
It began in the career from the bar in Paris, in 1830; he pled successfully during several years, particularly in political lawsuits. Then it gave up the palate and was withdrawn, in 1836, in its properties of the department of the Aisne, where it was devoted exclusively to agriculture. However, in the last years of the Government of July, it took an active share with the fights of the opposition and, in particular, in the countryside of the banquets reformists.
After the revolution of 1848, the voters of the Aisne sent it, for the first time, to sit at the constituent Assembly, where it remained until the Coup d'etat of 1851. Returned at this time in the private life, it reappeared with the Room only in 1865. He was elected like candidate of the opposition and was one of the founders of the center left. In 1871, he was elected appointed of Aisne to the National Assembly and sat in the rows of the left. He was re-elected on February 20th, 1876 and on October 14th, 1877, by the district of Castle-Thierry. In these two Rooms, as with the National Assembly, it was made register in the group of the left.
Tillancourt was president of the agricultural Meeting of the district of Castle-Thierry, since 1844.
source
-----
| Random links: | Alma (Quebec) | National park of Ranthambore | Charles Dupuis (lawyer) | Splanchnic circulation | Janon | Port_de_Philadelphie |