Louis Napoléon Lannes
Louis Napoléon Auguste Lannes, 2nd duc de Montebello (30 July 1801 – 18 July 1874) was a French diplomat and politician.
Life and career
Born in Paris, he was the son of
Lannes at first appeared, by his votes, to be linked to the Legitimist faction (which supported the claims to the French throne of the elder line of the House of Bourbon), but he was soon to join fully in support of the July Monarchy and usually then voted with the Doctrinaires. He spoke in many discussions about press freedom, the hereditary peerage (1831), imprisonment for debt, budget and progress in the army (1832).
Back in diplomacy, Lannes was sent on a mission to Denmark at the Court of Copenhagen (1833), then to Sweden ans shortly after as Minister Plenipotentiary at Berlin. In the Chamber of Peers, he supported the Cousin amendment law repealing the day of mourning in honor of Louis XVI on 21 January. He supported the platform of Partisan laws of September 1835, and proposed to his colleagues to bring them to the manager of the newspaper La Tribune.
In 1836, the Duke was appointed as ambassador of France to the Swiss Confederation in place of the
He was then appointed to represent France in Naples, at the court of the
The Duke of Montebello was recalled from Naples on 1 April 1839, replacing Louis-Mathieu Molé as foreign minister in an interim ministry, which was dissolved the following 12 May. He then handed the foreign ministry portfolio to Marshal Soult, Duke of Dalmatia, and returned to the Chamber of Peers where he spoke on literary property, on the Legion of Honour, on the Greek loan, and on child labor in factories.
He returned to Naples as ambassador in 1840, where he negotiated the marriage of the Duke of Aumale with Marie Caroline de Bourbon, Princess of Salerno (1844).
On 9 May 1847, the Duke of Montebello replaced Admiral
The Duke of Montebello left government following the Revolution of 1848. However, soon after, as part of a coalition of "old parties", the duke was elected, on 13 May 1849, to the Second Republic's Legislative Assembly. The duke represented the department of Marne, where he owned large vineyards. Lannes was part of the commission which called for an extension and confined himself to vote consistently with the majority: for the Roman expedition, for the law-Falloux Parieu on free education, and for the restriction of universal suffrage.
He did not immediately support the coup d'état of 2 December 1851. But he changed his mind and, on 15 February 1858, he was appointed ambassador to Russia instead of Count Rayneval. In this position, where he remained until 1864, he had to negotiate, among other things, the agreement of 6 April 1861, for the reciprocal guarantee works of art and spirit.
By decree of Emperor Napoleon III, on 5 October 1864, he was appointed a Senator. He retired as ambassador on 6 January 1866. He had long represented the canton of Ay in the General Council of the Marne, which was one of the vice-presidents.
He died at Chateau de Mareuil-sur-Ay in Marne in 1874, aged 72.
Family
He married Eleanor Jenkinson in 1830, a daughter of Sir Charles Jenkinson. They had two daughters and six sons. One of his brothers was Gustave de Montebello.
Decorations
- France: Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour (30 October 1844)
- Russia: Order of St. Andrew (conferred by the Emperor of Russia after his stay in Nice in 1864)
Sources
- Larousse encyclopédique en couleurs, France Loisirs, 1978
- « Louis Napoléon Lannes », in Adolphe Robert, Edgar Bourloton et Gaston Cougny, Dictionnaire des parlementaires français (1789–1891), XIXe siècle
- État présent de la noblesse française contenant le dictionnaire de la noblesse contemporaine et l'armorial général de France d'après les manuscrits de Ch. d'Hozier by Antoine Bachelin-Deflorenne, libr. des bibliophiles, 1887 p. 1360