Emperor List of Authors
Gaston DoumergueSir Robert Laird BordenCao Kun
Ryikov,Leksei IvanovichXu ShichangGao Lingwei
Wilhelm IILin SenAlexandre Millerand
Wang JingweiFranklin Delano RooseveltFranklin Delano Roosevelt
Adolf HitlerRichard Bedford BennettYan Huiqing
Albert LebrunLéon BlumWilliam Lyon Mackenzie King
William Lyon Mackenzie KingWilliam Lyon Mackenzie KingHenri Philippe Pétain
King George VIJoseph StalinArthur Meighen
Arthur MeighenWilhelm PieckRené Coty
John Fitzgerald KennedyHerbert Clark HooverJules-Vincent Auriol
Xuan TongXuan TongKonrad Adenauer
Li ZongrenDwight David EisenhowerCharles de Gaulle
Charles de GaulleCharles de GaulleNikita Khrushchev
Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick DaviHarry S. TrumanLester Bowles Pearson
Lyndon Baines JohnsonLouis Stephen St. LaurentWalter Ulbricht
Georges PompidouChiang Kai-shekChiang Kai-shek
Mao ZedongFélix GouinLudwig Wilhelm Erhard
Johann Ludwig Graf Schwerin von KrosigkJohn George Diefenbaker
Georges BidaultAndropovJohn Napier Turner
Gu WeijunVyacheslav Mikhailovich Molotov
Gaston Doumergue
Emperor  (August 11, 1863 ADJune 18, 1937 AD)
StartEnd
Reign1924 AD1931 AD

  Pierre-Paul-Henri-Gaston Doumergue (Aigues-Vives, Gard, 1 August 1863 – 18 June 1937 in Aigues-Vives) was a French politician of the Third Republic.
  
  Doumergue came from a Protestant family. Beginning as a Radical, he turned more towards the political right in his old age. He served as Prime Minister from 9 December 1913 to 2 June 1914. He held the portfolio for the colonies through the ministries of Viviani and Briand until the Ribot ministry of March, 1917, when he was sent to Russia to persuade the Kerensky government not to make a separate peace with Germany and Austria. He was elected the twelfth President of France on 13 June 1924, the only Protestant to hold that office. He served until 13 June 1931, and again was Prime Minister in a conservative national unity government, following the riots of 6 February 1934. This government lasted from 6 February to 8 November 1934.
  
  He was widely regarded as one of the most popular French Presidents, particularly after highly controversial Alexandre Millerand, who was his predecessor. Doumergue was single when elected, and became the first President of France to marry in office.
    

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