guó zuòzhělièbiǎo
luò 杜洛 doswéi yōng Francois Villon
· bèi lāi Joachim du Bellaygāo nǎi Pierre Corneille
wéi duō · guǒ Victor Hugoxià 'ěr · lāi 'ěr Charles Baudelaire
fāng · měi Stephane Mallarmewèi 'ěr lún Paul-Marie Veriaine
luò léi 'ā méng Comte de Lautréamontlán Arthur Rimbaud
'ěr méng Remy de Gourmontbǎo 'ěr - ràng · lāi Paul-Jean Toulet
lǎng · Francis Jammes 'ěr Léon-Paul Fargue
luò dài 'ěr Paul Claudelbǎo 'ěr · léi Paul Valery
xià 'ěr · pèi Charles Peguy pèi wéi 'āi 'ěr Jules Supervielle
luò dōng André Bretonài Paul Eluard
ā nài 'ěr Guillaume Apollinaire · lāi wéi 'ěr Jacques Prévert
ā gòng Louis Aragonbǎo 'ěr · 'ěr Paul Fort
hēng · xiū Henri Michauxāi léi José Maria de Heredia
ā 'ěr tuō Antonin Artaud wéi Pierre Reverdy
bài Saint-John Perse duō Sully Prudhomme
nèi · xià 'ěr René Char fán · 'ěr Yvan Goll
kǎi Alain Bosquet Yves Bonnefoy
ān liè · bǎo 'ěr · yuē · André Paul Guillaume Gidemiù sài Alfred de Musset
· 'ěr Frédéric Mistral
jiā dōng · méi Gaston Doumergue
guó lán sān gòng guó  (1863niánbāyuè11rì1937niánliùyuè18rì)
kāiduānzhōngjié
zàiwèi1924nián1931nián

   'āi 'ěr - bǎo luó - hēng - jiā dōng · méi (Pierre-Paul-Henri-GastonDoumergue)(1863 nián 8 yuè 11 shēng Aigues-Vives-1937 nián 6 yuè 18 shì Aigues-Vives) lán sān gòng guó shí 'èr rèn zǒng tǒngxiān zài yìn zhī běi fēi rèn wén guān, 1893 nián jìn shè huì dǎng rén shēnfèn dāng xuǎn zhòng yuán


  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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