1926 in France
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| See also: | Other events of 1926 History of France • Timeline • Years  | ||||
Events from the year 1926 in France.
Incumbents
- President: Gaston Doumergue
 - President of the Council of Ministers: 
- until 20 July: Aristide Briand
 - 20 July-23 July: Édouard Herriot
 - starting 23 July: Raymond Poincaré
 
 
Events
- 9 May – French navy bombards Damascus because of Druze riots.
 - 15 July – Grand Mosque of Paris inaugurated.
 - 24 November – The village of Rocquebillier on the Riviera is almost destroyed in a massive hailstorm.
 - The Guide Michelin first awards stars to restaurants.
 
Arts and literature
- Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts institutes the Prix Puvis de Chavannes, named after co-founder and first president, Pierre Puvis de Chavannes.
 
Sport
- 20 June – Tour de France begins.
 - 18 July – Tour de France ends, won by Lucien Buysse of Belgium.
 
Births
January to June
- 17 January – Robert Filliou, artist (died 1987)
 - 2 February – Philippe Chatrier, tennis player (died 2000)
 - 7 February – Pierre Villette, composer (died 1998)
 - 11 February – Paul Bocuse, chef (died 2018)
 - 19 February – Pierre Guénin, journalist, gay rights activist (died 2017)
 - 1 March – Robert Clary, French-American actor, author and lecturer (died 2022)
 - 19 March – Henri René Guieu, science fiction writer (died 2000)
 - 13 April – André Testut, motor racing driver (died 2005)
 - 8 May – Pierre Broué, historian and Trotskyist (died 2005)
 - 5 June – Claude Berge, mathematician (died 2002)
 - 12 June – Jean-Pierre Munch, cyclist (died 1996)
 - 26 June – Jérôme Lejeune, paediatrician and geneticist (died 1994)
 
July to December
- 6 July – Serge Roullet, film director and screenwriter (died 2023)
 - 10 August – Michel Breitman, writer and translator (died 2009)
 - 14 August – René Goscinny, author, editor and humorist (died 1977)
 - 16 August – Roger Agache, archaeologist (died 2011)
 - 17 August 
- Maurice Lusien, swimmer (died 2017)
 - Jean Poiret, actor, director and screenwriter (died 1992)
 
 - 15 September – Jean-Pierre Serre, mathematician
 - 17 September – Jean-Marie Lustiger, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Paris and cardinal (died 2007)
 - 15 October – Michel Foucault, philosopher, historian, critic and sociologist (died 1984)
 - 1 November – James Marson, politician (died 2017)
 - 3 November – Paul Rebeyrolle, painter (died 2005)
 - 9 November – Raymond Hains, artist and photographer (died 2005)
 - 12 December – Étienne-Émile Baulieu, biochemist (died 2025)
 - 21 December – Georges Boudarel, academic and Communist militant (died 2003)
 
Deaths
- 14 January – René Boylesve, author (born 1867)
 - 28 February – Alphonse Louis Nicolas Borrelly, astronomer (born 1842)
 - 26 March – Georges Aaron Bénédite, Egyptologist (born 1857)
 - 2 July – Émile Coué, psychologist and pharmacist (born 1857)
 - 21 September – Léon Charles Thévenin, telegraph engineer (born 1857)
 - 30 September – Agnès Souret, model, "la plus belle femme de France" (peritonitis in Argentina) (born 1902)
 - 5 December – Claude Monet, painter (born 1840)[1]
 - Date unknown – Jean-Camille Formigé, architect (born 1845)
 
See also
References
- ^ "Claude Monet | Biography, Art, Water Lilies, Haystacks, Impression: Sunrise, & Facts | Britannica". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
 
