2024-01-10 01:32:48
Introduction
Pantaléon Costa de Beauregard Birth June 19, 1806
Marlieu Death September 19, 1864
La Motte-Servolex Nationality Duchy of Savoy Country (Country comes from the Latin pagus which designated a territorial and tribal subdivision of extent…) of residence (The name of residence is given to a set of roads often which form a loop having the …) Duchy of Savoy
French Empire Profession(s) Military Other activities Sardinian deputy 1848-1849
then 1854-1860
President of the General Council of Savoy (1860-1864)
Léon or Pantaléon or Louis Marie Pantaleon Costa, marquis de Saint-Genix Beauregard, born June 19, 1806 in Marlieu (Isère), died September 19, 1864 in La Motte-Servolex (Savoie), was a man (A man is an individual adult male of the species called Modern Man (Homo…) of Sardinian State.
Coat of arms of the Costa de Beauregard family: banded gold and azure, on the chief sewn with azure, charged with three golden fleur-de-lis.
Family
He is the son of Victor Costa de Beauregard and Elisabeth de Quinson.
He has three children:
- Charles-Albert Costa de Beauregard
- Camille Costa de Beauregard, Salesian priest and founder of the Bocage orphanage in Chambéry
- Alix Costa de Beauregard, entered religion under the name of Sister Mélanie
He was the squire and friend of Charles-Albert of Sardinia (Sardinia (in Italian: Sardegna and in the standardized Sardinian language: Sardigna) is…).
Passion
He is also an ornithologist, archaeologist, specialized in the collection of hummingbirds and accumulated a large number of them (The notion of number in linguistics is covered in the article “Number…) during his life (Life is the name given :), and amateur historian. He was also president of the Academy of Savoy in 1844.
In 1839, Costa’s Hummingbird was named by Jules Bourcier in his honor. A statue of the founder Albert Victor Thiebaut representing him is exhibited at the Chambéry Museum of Fine Arts, likewise, a portrait made by Benoît Molin is at the Savoy Museum.
Political career
He was a Sardinian deputy from 1848 until his resignation a year later. Then returns to the Parliament of Turin (Turin (Türìn in Piedmontese – Torino in Italian) is a city, capital of…) from 1854 to 1860.
Leader of the Savoyard conservative right, he is one of the Savoyard deputies who defend Savoyard identity and loyalty to the house (A house is a medium-sized building intended for the habitation of a family,…) of Savoy in a Sardinian political elite mainly in favor of Italian unification (Italian is the name commonly used for the rope used to operate a winder ….). Furthermore, he was strongly committed to defending the interests of the Catholic Church (The church can be:) during the policy of secularization of the Italian State and the suppression of religious congregations led by King Victor-Emmanuel. II of Savoy. This policy led, in part, to the breakdown of the Savoy-Piedmont unity and to the support of the Catholic Church for the attachment of Savoy to France, more respectful of the latter’s prerogatives. However, it must be emphasized that he refuses the idea of ​​a separation (Generally speaking, the word separation designates an action consisting of separating something…) between Savoy and its ruling house, he expresses it as follows: in a speech “…When the French eagles extend their formidable flight over the rocks of Mont Cenis, ah! may you never regret having so poorly understood the importance of the dedication of the generous men who defend them! This is my dearest wish, because the dynastic affections, the traditions, the memories, among us, will not be extinguished in a day (The day or the day is the interval which separates the rising of the Sun ; it’s here…)… “.
He thus refused a senatorial seat offered by Napoleon III in 1860. However, he became the first president of the General Council of Savoy in 1860 until his death (Death is the definitive state of a biological organism which ceases to live (even if…).
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#Louis #Marie #Coast #Pants