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Bernard de Vésins

Bernard de Vésins
Vesins, Bernard.jpg
Bernard de Vésins in 1922
Born Marie Joseph Pierre Bernard de Lévezou de Vésins
(1869-03-13)13 March 1869
Bourges, Cher, France
Died 6 July 1951(1951-07-06) (aged 82)
Maisoncelles-du-Maine, Mayenne, France
Nationality French
Occupation Soldier, essayist
Known for Action Française militant

Count Bernard de Vésins (13 March 1869 – 6 July 1951) was a French soldier, essayist, practicing Catholic and right-wing Action Française militant. He was hostile to Freemasons, Jews and socialists, whom he considered to be working together in conspiracy to undermine the traditional Catholic values of France. In the 1920s he was President of the Ligue d'Action Française during a period when the Catholic church was disassociating itself from the movement.

Marie Joseph Pierre Bernard de Lévezou de Vésins was born in Bourges, Cher, on 13 March 1869. His father was Count Victor de Lévezou de Vesins, and his mother was the daughter of Adrien de Forcade, sieur de La Grézère. On 15 April 1893 in Versailles he married Marie Augustine Camille de Gastebois (born 9 February 1874). They had two children, Marie Thérèse (1895–1988) and Gabrielle (1897–1928).

The political organization of Henri Vaugeois's Action Française movement, the Ligue d'Action Française, was launched in the spring of 1905, as was the Action Française Federation of Students, directed by Lucien Moreau. Members pledged to fight the republican regime and to support restoration of the monarchy under Prince Philippe, Duke of Orléans (1869–1926). Bernard de Vésins was among the many early members of the Action Française who were practicing Catholics, and included the art historian Louis Dimier and the essayist Léon de Montesquiou. They helped Charles Maurras (1868–1952) develop the royalist league's pro-Catholic policies. The league led resistance to the inventaires in the winter of 1905–06. In Versailles, Bernard de Vésins was arrested and sentenced to two years in prison.

During World War I (1914–18) Vésins served in the 8th Field Artillery Regiment (8e RAC) and the 228th Artillery Regiment (228e RA). He was a colonel in the army. Vésins was made an Officer of the Legion of Honour on 29 April 1919, and was awarded the Croix de guerre 1914–1918 with palm and star.

In the French legislative elections of 16 November 1919 Bernard de Vésins, president of the League, was defeated in the first district of Paris. Major Catholic conferences were organized under the auspices of Cardinal Mercier, starting in the winter of 1921–22. Charles Maurras and Bernard de Vesins attended in 1922. In late 1922 Georges Valois started working towards creating an Estates General of French Production, a movement that would bring together industrialists and leaders of labour unions to work on solutions to social and economic issues. The textile manufacturer Eugène Mathon headed the national committee, which included Valois, Jacques Arthuys, Bernard de Vésins and several others.


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