(Redirected from Pierre Paul Cambon)'Pierre Paul Cambon' (
January 20,
1843 -
1924) was a
French diplomatist and brother to
Jules Martin Cambon.
He was called to the
Parisian bar, and became private secretary to
Jules Ferry in the ''
préfecture'' of the
Seine. After ten years of administrative work in France as secretary of ''préfecture'', and then as prefect successively of the ''
départements'' of
Aube (1872),
Doubs (1876),
Nord (1877-1882), he exchanged into the diplomatic service, being nominated French minister
plenipotentiary at
Tunis.
In 1886 be became French
ambassador to
Madrid; was transferred to
Constantinople in 1890, and in 1898 to
London, where he served until
1920. In London, Cambon quickly became an important figure, helping to negotiate the
Entente Cordiale between Britain and France in
1904, and serving as the French representative at the London Conference which resolved the
Balkan Wars between
1912 and
1913. Upon the outbreak of the
First World War, Cambon helped secure British intervention on the French side. He was decorated with the
Grand Cross of the Légion d'honneur, and became a member of the
French Academy of Sciences.
Reference
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