René Renoult

René Renoult (29 August 1867 in Paris – 30 April 1946 in Paris) was a French Minister and lawyer.[1]
Biography
Renoult was the son of Étienne and Élisa Geranger, a female day laborer. He studied at the Faculty of Law in Paris and obtained his doctorate in 1888. He married for the first time with Blanche-Clothilde Wormser in 1910, and a second time with Henriette-Emelie-Céleste Giriat in 1937.
Renoult was a member of the Radical Party. His political career started in 1911, when he became General Counselor of the Lure commune (until 1913). In 1902 he became deputy for the Haute-Saône département (until 1919). From 1920 to 1941 he was Senator of Var.[1]
Offices
- 1889: Chief of cabinet under Charles Floquet, president of the Chamber of Deputies.
 - 1903: President of the Radical Party
 - 1911–1912: Minister of Labour and Social Security Provisions
 - 1913–1914: Minister of the Interior
 - 1914: Minister of Finance (during 85 days).
 - 1914: Minister of Transportation
 - 1924–1926, 1932–1933: Minister of Justice
 - 1926: Minister of the Marine.
 
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to René Renoult.
- ^ a b "RENOULT René". Sénat (in French). 2 March 2025. Retrieved 2 March 2025.
 
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| First Republic (1792–1804)  | 
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| House of Bonaparte (1815)  | 
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| House of Bonaparte (1852–1870)  | |
| Third Republic (1870–1940)  | 
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| Vichy France (1940–1944)  | 
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| Free France (1941–1944)  | 
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| Provisional Government (1944–1946)  | |
| Fourth Republic (1946–1958)  | 
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| Fifth Republic (1958–present)  | 
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