Guillaume Soisson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Guillaume Soisson (18 November 1866 – 27 August 1938) was a Luxembourgian engineer and politician for the Party of the Right.

A conservative, Soisson entered the cabinet of Hubert Loutsch in 1915 as the Director-General for Public Works and Director-General of Agriculture.[1] He resigned, along with the Prime Minister, on 24 February 1916.[2] He entered the cabinet for the second time, under Émile Reuter, as the Director-General for Public Works: replacing Guillaume Leidenbach, who had resigned on 14 April 1923.[3]

Footnotes

  1. (French)/(German) "Mémorial A, 1915, No. 92" (PDF). Service central de législation. Retrieved 2008-01-17. 
  2. (French)/(German) "Mémorial A, 1916, No. 18" (PDF). Service central de législation. Retrieved 2008-01-17. 
  3. (French)/(German) "Mémorial A, 1923, No. 15" (PDF). Service central de législation. Retrieved 2008-01-17. 
Political offices
Preceded by
Victor Thorn
Director-General for Public Works
1st time

1915 – 1916
Succeeded by
Antoine Lefort
Preceded by
Guillaume Leidenbach
Director-General for Public Works
2nd time

1923 – 1925
Succeeded by
Norbert Dumont


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