- Source: Henry Franklin-Bouillon
Henry Franklin-Bouillon (3 September 1870 - 12 November 1937) was a French politician.
Franklin-Bouillon was born in Saint-Hélier, Jersey. He began as a member of the Radical-Socialist Party, but belonged to its furthest right-wing: he advocated that the Radical-Socialists join with Poincaré's alliance of centre-right and right-wing parties to oppose communism and socialism and support punitive military policy towards Germany. In 1927 these stances prompted him to lead two-dozen like-minded deputies to quit the Radical-Socialist Party, forming a mid-sized centre-right parliamentary party of Independent Radicals, named the Social and Radical Left group.
He met Mustafa Kemal Atatürk in Ankara in 1921 and they became close friends. In 1922 he travelled through the devastated areas by the retreating Greek army and after visiting the burned town of Manisa, he declared that out of 11,000 houses in the city of Magnesia (Manisa) only 1,000 remained.
Franklin-Bouillon died aged 67 in Paris.
References
External links
Works by or about Henry Franklin-Bouillon at the Internet Archive
Newspaper clippings about Henry Franklin-Bouillon in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Turk (mesin)
- Henry Franklin-Bouillon
- Rapallo and Peschiera conferences
- Treaty of Ankara (1921)
- Franco-Turkish War
- Greco-Turkish War (1919–1922)
- Classical radicalism
- Pan-African Congress
- Paul Painlevé
- Social and Radical Left
- 1922 in France