Emmanuel Crétet

Emmanuel Crétet
Born 10 February 1747
Le Pont-de-Beauvoisin, Savoie, France
Died 28 November 1809 (aged 62)
Paris, France
Nationality French
Occupation Merchant, financier and politician
Known for First governor of the Banque de France

Emmanuel Crétet, Comte de Champmol (10 February 1747 – 28 November 1809) was a French merchant, financier and politician. He was the first governor of the Banque de France.

Early years

Emmanuel Crétet was born in the village of Le Pont-de-Beauvoisin, Savoie, on 10 February 1747, the youngest of six children of a timber merchant. He studied with the Oratorians before joining a merchant in Bordeaux.[1] He made seven voyages to the West Indies, on some of which he commanded the ship. He spent time in England, where he acquired liberal views.[2] He then settled in Paris in the trading house of an uncle. He inherited his uncle's business. Shortly before the French Revolution (1789–1799) he had become Director of a fire insurance company.[1]

First Republic

Crétet disapproved of the excesses of the Terror. He moved to Dijon, where he became a trader. He purchased some of the national assets that were sold by the revolutionary government.[1] On 4 May 1791 he bought the chartreuse of Champmol in the department of Côte-d'Or, founded in 1384 and burial place of the Valois Dukes of Burgundy. He destroyed the church of the former monastery and most of the buildings, apart from those he kept for his own use or to decorate the garden.[3] The next year the tombs and coffins of the dukes were transported to Saint-Bénigne. The altar and some woodwork from the church was also reassembled.[4]

Crétet entered politics in 1795.[5] He was elected to represent Côte-d'Or in the Council of Ancients, the Upper House of the French Directory, taking his seat at the start of Brumaire, year IV.[2] There he began a political career dedicated to economic and financial administration.[1]

Consulate

Signature of the Concordat on 15 July 1801. From left to right: Joseph Bonaparte, Napoleon, Portalis, Cardinal Giuseppe Spina, d'Hauterive and Cretet.

Crétet supported the coup-d'état of 18 Brumaire (9 November 1799) in which Napoleon came to power as First Consul. On 4 Nivôse year VIII he was appointed both to the Senate and to the Council of State.[1] He was named Councilor of State in charge of bridges and roads. He was willing to support new construction techniques, such as iron bridges in Paris. He undertook various canal projects, of which the Saint-Quentin canal was the first.[2]

Although he was Protestant, Crétet was one of the most active negotiators of the Concordat that reestablished the Catholic religion in France.[6] He was one of the signatories to the Concordat of 15 July 1801 that aimed to achieve peace with the church.[1]

On 11 Thermidor Year X Crétet issued a report on a central bank for France. He said it must be independent of the government, free in the way it used its capital and credit. If the government interfered, the bank would never establish credit and would be bound to fail.[1]

Empire

Crétet was a member of committees charged with drawing up the statutes of the central bank, and was appointed first governor of the Banque de France by imperial decree on 25 April 1806. On 9 August 1807 he left the bank to become Minister of the Interior.[1] He spent lavishly on monuments, and encouraged commerce, manufacturing, learning and the arts.[7] He had the Stock Exchange built in Paris and the Granary, which was burned by the Paris Commune in 1871.[8] Crétet was appointed Commander of the Legion of Honour.[9] Napoleon made him Comte de Champmol on 26 April 1808.[1]

Crétet resigned due to sickness on 1 October 1809 and was replaced by Joseph Fouché.[1] Crétet died on 28 November 1809, aged 62. The emperor decreed that he should be given great honors at his funeral. He was buried in the Panthéon, Paris.[10]

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