Agénor Bardoux
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Agénor Bardoux (15 January 1829–23 November 1897) was a French statesman and republican.
A native of Bourges, he was established as an advocate at Clermont, and did not hesitate to proclaim his republican sympathies. In 1871 he was elected deputy of the French National Assembly, and re-elected in 1876 and in 1877. In the chamber he was president of the group of the centre-left, standing strongly for the republic but against anti-clericalism. In the republican chamber elected after May 16, 1877, he became minister of public instruction (December 1877), and proposed various republican laws, notably on compulsory primary education. He resigned in 1879. He was not re-elected in 1881, but in December 1882 was named senator for life.
Married in 1873 Clémence Villa (26 December 1847 - 2 December 1939), by whom he had at least one son, the French senator and academic Achille Octave Marie Jacques Bardoux. One of his descendants, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing (born 1926) was President of France from 1974 until 1981.
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- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.