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Jacques Seydoux

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Jacques Seydoux

Charles Louis Auguste Jacques Seydoux (1870–1929) was a French diplomat, economist and Director of Commercial Relations at the French Foreign Ministry.[1]

He was the organiser of the Blockade Department during the First World War and was Assistant Director for Commercial Affairs from May 1919 to October 1924. He was then Deputy Director of Political and Commercial Affairs from until December 1926. He was estimated by his colleagues as the most creative thinker on political matters and he wrote every major paper on economics at the Foreign Ministry for eight years. During the 1920s he was the chief reparations expert on the French side and was firmly in favour of Franco-German economic rapprochement.[2]

The historian Stephen Schuker called Seydoux "by far the most lucid mind among senior French bureaucrats in the 1920s...self-effacing, nonpolitical, but independent-minded who put his expertise at the service of the most diverse political superiors and managed to win the admiration of them all".[3]

Works

  • De Versailles au Plan Young (Paris: Plon, 1932).

Notes

  1. ^ Jeffrey W. Taliaferro, Norrin M. Ripsman and Steven E. Lobell, The Challenge of Grand Strategy: The Great Powers and the Broken Balance Between the World Wars (Cambridge University Press, 2012), p. 48.
  2. ^ Stephen A. Schuker, The End of French Predominance in Europe. The Financial Crisis of 1924 and the Adoption of the Dawes Plan (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1976), p. 83, n.
  3. ^ Schuker, p. 83 and n.

Further reading

  • Stanislas Jennesson, ‘L’Europe de Jacques Seydoux’, Revue Historique 299, 20. 1 (1998), pp. 123-143.
  • Stanislas Jeannesson, ‘Jacques Seydoux et la diplomatie économique dans la France de l’apres-guerre’, RI, 121 (2005), pp. 15-17.
  • N. Jordan, ‘The reorientation of French diplomacy in the 1920s: the role of Jacques Seydoux’, English Historical Review, 117, 473 (2002), pp. 870-873.
  • Georges-Henri Souto, ‘Die deutschen Reparationen und das Seydoux-Projekt, 1920-1921’, Vierteljahrschaft fur Zeitgeschichte 23 (1975), pp. 237-270.