TALLEYRAND, CHARLES MAURICE DE

tălˈērăndˌ, Fr. shärl mōrēsˈ də tälāräNˈ-pārēgôrˈ, 1754–1838, French statesman and diplomat. Born into the high nobility, he was early destined for the Roman Catholic Church because of a childhood accident that left him partially lame. Despite Talleyrand's notorious impiety, he was made (1789) bishop of Autun by King Louis XVI.

Talleyrand and the French Revolution

A representative of the clergy in the States-General of 1789, Talleyrand sided with the revolutionists. He proposed the appropriation of church lands by the state, endorsed the civil constitution of the clergy, and was excommunicated (1791) by the pope after consecrating two "constitutional" bishops. In 1792 he was sent by the National Assembly on a mission to London to secure Great Britain's neutrality, but the radical turn of the French Revolution nullified his success. A lifelong advocate of constitutional monarchy and peace, Talleyrand sought refuge in England in Sept., 1792, following the fall of the monarchy. In 1794 he went to the United States, where he stayed until after the establishment (Nov., 1795) of the Directory in France, when he returned (Sept., 1796) to Paris.

Talleyrand and Napoleon

Made foreign minister in 1797, Talleyrand hitched his career to the rising fortune of Napoleon Bonaparte (see Napoleon I. His part in the XYZ Affair and his endorsement of Napoleon's plan for seizing Egypt in 1798 had unfortunate consequences for France. In July, 1799, he resigned his post, only to resume it after helping Napoleon gain power under the Consulate (Nov., 1799). He helped to bring about the Concordat of 1801 with the Vatican, shortly after which the ban of excommunication against him was lifted (1802). The following year he was appointed to the lucrative position of grand chamberlain under Napoleon, now emperor, who in 1806 created him prince of Benevento.

Napoleon tended more and more to ignore Talleyrand's cautious advice, and the split between the two widened as Talleyrand tried unsuccessfully to restrain Napoleon's ambitions. Despite the accusations of Talleyrand's enemies (especially Joseph Fouché), he apparently played only a passive role in the abduction of the duke of Enghien. Napoleon's moves to gain Spain triggered Talleyrand's resignation (1807), although he remained in the imperial council and continued as grand chamberlain until early 1809. Ironically, Talleyrand was assigned the distasteful duty of keeping the three Spanish princes seized at Bayonne captive in his château.

Convinced of the necessity of a strong Austria to maintain European stability, Talleyrand, who accompanied Napoleon to the Congress of Erfurt (1808), secretly worked in Austria's rather than Napoleon's interest by persuading the Russian Czar Alexander I to oppose Napoleon's designs against Austria. He also had a hand in bringing about Napoleon's marriage to Marie Louise, daughter of the Austrian emperor Francis I in 1810. Napoleon's attack on Russia (1812) completed Talleyrand's alienation from the French emperor.

Talleyrand and the Restoration

When the allies entered Paris in 1814, Talleyrand persuaded them to restore the Bourbons in the person of Louis XVIII, who made him foreign minister. He negotiated the first Treaty of Paris of May, 1814, by which France, despite the defeat, was granted the French borders of 1792. He represented France at the Congress of Vienna (see Vienna, Congress of) of 1814–15, where he scored his greatest diplomatic triumphs. Winning the European powers to his principle of "legitimacy," namely, the restoration of Europe to its prerevolutionary status, and shrewdly exploiting the dissension among the allies, he succeeded in taking part in the negotiations on equal terms with the principal victorious powers.

Talleyrand remained in Vienna during the Hundred Days but resigned in Sept., 1815, shortly after the second Bourbon Restoration—according to his memoirs because of his opposition to the second Treaty of Paris of Nov., 1815, but in all probability because of pressure from the ultraroyalist chamber on Louis XVIII to dismiss him. In 1830, Louis Philippe, whom he had helped to power, offered him the portfolio of foreign affairs, but Talleyrand preferred to serve as ambassador to London. He resigned in 1834, after having achieved the recognition of Belgium (1831) and signed the Quadruple Alliance of 1834.

Assessment

The prototype of the witty, cynical diplomat, Talleyrand has been either exalted as the savior of Europe in 1815 or damned as an opportunist or even a traitor. His corruption was undeniable, and his pliability enabled him to hold power under the ancien régime, the Revolution, Napoleon, the Restoration, and the July Monarchy. Yet Talleyrand was a good European, and his policy was aimed consistently—and often courageously—at the peace and stability of Europe as a whole.

Bibliography

See his memoirs (1891–92; tr., 5 vol., 1891–92). The standard biography is by G. Lacour-Gayet (4 vol., 1928–30, in French). See also biographies by D. Cooper (1932, repr. 1958), E. Dard (tr. 1937), C. C. Brinton (1936, repr. 1963), J. F. Bernard (1973), and J. Orieux (tr. 1974).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Talleyrand Charles Maurice De  - 1144 results

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...Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand Photogravure...CHAPTER I I CHARLES-MAURICE DE TALLEYRAND-PERIGORD was born...retainer of the de Talleyrand family. The two...the Chateau, where Charles-Maurice was to experience...
...third husband was Count Charles Rodolph von Schulenburg...Dorothea, Duchesse de Talleyrand. The Duchess died on...Humboldt. Louis II. Charles Louis de Bourbon-Parma , son...Affairs during Prince Talleyrands stay at Vienna, accompanied...
...the case of extracts from Helvetius De lHomme , 33 it is probable that it was...distinguished group of thinkers, including Destutt de Tracy, principle theorist of the Ideologist...and Cabanis, then a young man; and with de Tracy and Morellet he kept up an intermittent...
...indulged in famous liaisons with the diplomat Talleyrand, Count Narbonne, and the political thinker...Extraordinary Woman: Selected Writings of Germaine de Stael, 5; Berger, introduction to Stael...limited to Staels young female readership. Maurice Beebe, in his well- known Ivory Towers...
...the diplomatist Talleyrand, and even in his...historique et critique de la Poesie fran...BACKGROUND CHARLES-AUGUSTIN SAINTE-BEUVE...1804. His father, Charles-Fran ois de Sainte- Beuve...men, among them Charles de Remusat, Prosper...
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journal articles on: Talleyrand Charles Maurice De  - 5 results

 
 
...spectacular death scenes, Mitterrand is outclassed by Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Perigord, whose career serves as a master class...diplomat Count Metternich suggests: "Men such as M. de Talleyrand are like sharp instruments it is dangerous to play...
...of the truth. A century earlier Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand, who had benefited from periods...a lecture before the Institut de France to assess the links which...had assisted their liberation. Talleyrand thought that a common language...
...France." (29) France sought to put an end to the United States-Haiti trade through diplomatic channels; Charles Maurice de Talleyrand pleaded with Jefferson. Senator George Logan of Pennsylvania tried unsuccessfully in 1805 to push a bill that...
...gentlemen, no zeal.") Charles-Maurice Perigord de Talleyrand (1759-1 838), advice to...attached chart. (3.) Charles Dallet, Histoire de lEglise en Coree, 2 vols...25 April 1866, in Annales de la Propagation de la Foi...
...ambition of the French foreign minister Talleyrand to drive a wedge between the allies...were also opposed to the Tsars plans. Talleyrand and Metternich joined forces and drew...enmity to secret treaties of any kind. Talleyrand, the chief instigator of the treaty...


 

magazine articles on: Talleyrand Charles Maurice De  - 8 results

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...high aristocracy, Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Perigord (1754-1838...leisure to write Talleyrand) to two high cabinet...Churchill and de Gaulle. His Diaries...Beaverbrook, de Gaulle, Nancy...cynically brilliant Talleyrand inspired an equally...
...by Andrew Roberts Charles-Maurice, Prince de Talleyrand-Perigord, has been very well...by her husband, the Baron de Feucheres. After Talleyrand arranged everything, the...although he kept pocketing King Charles Xs annual hundred thousand...
...Simon, a wealthy speculator, banker, and arms dealer. The well-connected Simon couple---famed French diplomat Charles Maurice de Talleyrand was a witness at the wedding--had commissioned Girodet to paint the young womans portrait. It received a rather...
...the French foreign minister, Charles Maurice de Talleyrand, and negotiate for the purchase...description of the purchase. Talleyrand waved his hand and replied...expedition lost a man when Sergeant Charles Floyd, the quartermaster, died...
...plenipotentiary to the Netherlands, but Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand, the French statesman and principal...Delacroix accompanied the Count de Mornay, King Louis-Philippes envoy...decorative cycle for the Salon de la Paix in the Hotel de Ville was...
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newspaper articles on: Talleyrand Charles Maurice De  - 5 results

 
 
...faces the lies and truths, brilliance and flaws of Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Perigord himself. Yet Robin Harris has passed all...brother Artois, who then challenged him, "The Prince de Talleyrand forgets himself", Tally retorted: "I fear so but...
...metric for authenticity. Its advocates, who called it metric after the Greek word metron meaning measure, were Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand, the Bishop of Autun in France, and Sir John Riggs Miller in Britain in the 1790s. In 1840, the French made...
...spoke on the condition of anonymity and quoted Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Perigord, a French diplomat from the 19th century...seems to have forgotten the important quote from Talleyrand: Most of all, not too much zeal, " the official...
...national self-preservation will dictate willingness to consider the profound observation of the French diplomat Charles Maurice de Talleyrand: "True strength restrains itself - true greatness sets its own limits." Yonah Alexander is a professor and...
...story about the great 19th-century French diplomat Charles Maurice de Talleyrand, who served kings, revolutionaries and Emperor...duplicity in diplomatic affairs. Upon learning of Talleyrands death in 1838, another famous diplomat, Prince...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Talleyrand Charles Maurice De  - 7 results

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TALLEYRAND, CHARLES MAURICE DE tal erand , Fr. sharl mores d...that left him partially lame. Despite Talleyrands notorious impiety, he was made (1789) bishop of Autun by King Louis XVI. Talleyrand and the French Revolution A representative...
...French general and statesman; illegitimate son of Charles Maurice de Talleyrand and Adele de Flahaut. He fought under Napoleon I and served...as ambassador to London. The lover of Hortense de Beauharnais , Flahaut was the father of Napoleon...
...1810) the service of French Emperor Napoleon I, who made him a duke and a councillor of state. A follower of Charles Maurice de Talleyrand , he served (1814) in the provisional government formed after the fall of Paris and supported the recall...
...French foreign minister Charles Maurice de Talleyrand to receive it officially...commissioners through Mme de Villette, a friend of Talleyrand. Negotiations were carried...proposal that the Americans pay Talleyrand about $250,000 before the...
...been reached before the congress convened (see Paris, Treaty of , 1814), but France was represented by Charles Maurice de Talleyrand , who, by skillfully exploiting differences among the allies, soon obtained an equal voice with the four...
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