Edmond Rousse
Aimé Joseph Edmond Rousse (18 March 1817 – 1 August 1906) was a French lawyer, and member of the Académie française from 1880 until his death.[1] He was born and died in Paris.
Biography
He was called to the Barreau de Paris (Paris bar association), before becoming secretary to the Conférence des avocats, then member of the conseil de l'Ordre des avocats (1862) puis and finally bâtonnier to the barreau de Paris (1870).
He was secretary of Chaix-d'Est-Ange, of which he published the pleas, president, in 1870, of the Paris bar, he published his Pleas and Speeches in two volumes.
Elected to the Academy on May 13, 1880 to replace Jules Favre, and received by the Duc d'Aumale on April 7, 1881. He received the Vicomte de Vogüé.
Works
- Consultations sur les décrets du 29 mars 1880 (1880)
- Avocats et Magistrats (1903)
References
- ^ Paris, Musée du Barreau de (2021-05-28). "Zoom sur Edmond Rousse (1817-1906), "Le grand bâtonnier de la première guerre"". Musée du Barreau de Paris (in French). Retrieved 2023-02-19.
Bibliography
- de Tarde, Alfred (1908). Eloge de Edmond Rousse (in French). Lyon: Alcan Lévy.
External links
- Académie française
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- t
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- Jean Ogier de Gombauld (1634)
- Paul Tallement le Jeune (1666)
- Antoine Danchet (1712)
- Jean-Baptiste-Louis Gresset (1748)
- Claude-François-Xavier Millot (1777)
- André Morellet (1785)
- Pierre-Édouard Lémontey (1819)
- Joseph Fourier (1826)
- Victor Cousin (1830)
- Jules Favre (1867)
- Edmond Rousse (1880)
- Pierre de Ségur (1907)
- Robert de Flers (1920)
- Louis Madelin (1927)
- Robert Kemp (1956)
- René Huyghe (1960)
- Georges Vedel (1998)
- Assia Djebar (2005)
- Andreï Makine (2016)