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fme_889379 - IV REPUBLIC Médaille, Conseil de la République

IV REPUBLIC Médaille, Conseil de la République AU
150.00 €(Approx. 166.50$ | 126.00£)
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Type : Médaille, Conseil de la République
Date: 1952
Metal : silver
Millesimal fineness : 950 ‰
Diameter : 49,5 mm
Orientation dies : 12 h.
Engraver MULLER Louis (1902-1957)
Weight : 65,66 g.
Edge : lisse + corne 1ARGENT
Puncheon : corne 1ARGENT
Coments on the condition:
Patine grise hétérogène, présentant quelques taches d’oxydation. Petites concrétions au revers. Légères marques d’usure

Obverse


Obverse legend : .REPUBLIQUE. FRANCAISE. - LIBERTE/ EGALITE. FRATERNITE.
Obverse description : Buste féminin de face, la tête tournée à droite. Signé : LMULLER.

Reverse


Reverse legend : CONSEIL DE LA - REPUBLIQUE // 1952.
Reverse description : Deux allégories féminine et masculine tenant les tables de la loi ouvertes; arbre entre les deux personnages. Cartouche à l’exergue.

Commentary


Médaille non décernée.

Historical background


IV REPUBLIC

(16/01/1947-8/01/1959)

Characterized by a parliamentary regime coupled with great ministerial instability, the Fourth Republic has the particularity of never having been officially proclaimed. Indeed, De Gaulle, when he arrived in Paris on August 25, 1944, refused to do so on the pretext that the Republic had never ceased to exist. Considering that the French State of Marshal Pétain was only a simple state of affairs, he considers that the Republic survived in free France and his birth certificate must then be June 18, 1940. However, his departure, the January 20, 1946, and the referendum of October 13, 1946 approving a new Constitution, mark the official beginning of this republic. It knows two presidents: Vincent Auriol (16/01/1947 - 23/12/1953) and René Coty (23/12/1953 - 8/1/1959). The open crisis caused by the revolt of the army of Algeria leads, in 1958, to its fall which is confirmed by the adoption of a new constitution on September 28, 1958. Nevertheless, it does not cease definitively until the 8 January 1959 when General de Gaulle was installed as President of the Fifth Republic.

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