Louis-Mathieu, Count Molé
Louis-Mathieu, Count Molé (born Jan. 24, 1781, Paris—died Nov. 23, 1855, Champlâtreux, Fr.) was a French monarchist statesman who held office under Napoleon I, Louis XVIII, and Louis-Philippe.
The young Molé left France during the Revolution but returned in 1796. He gained Napoleon’s approval after his publication of Essais de morale et de politique (1806), a justification of monarchical government; Napoleon made him auditor to the Council of State in 1806, with successive promotions to minister of justice in 1813. A peer of France during the Second Restoration (1815), Molé was minister for the navy (1817–18) but thereafter entered the opposition to the regime.
- Born:
- Jan. 24, 1781, Paris
- Died:
- Nov. 23, 1855, Champlâtreux, Fr. (aged 74)
After the July Revolution of 1830, Molé served Louis-Philippe as prime minister and minister of foreign affairs (1836–39). His ministry strengthened the French hold on Algeria, achieved a satisfactory solution of the Belgian question, and sought conciliation at home. The ministry, however, was attacked for being a mouthpiece of the King, and Molé resigned in 1839 (though he continued to serve in the Chamber of Deputies). When revolution broke out in 1848, Louis-Philippe again asked Molé to form a government (February 23), but to do so proved impracticable. He was a right-wing deputy in the Legislative Assembly in 1848–51, but after the coup d’etat of Dec. 2, 1851, he retired from public life.