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| See also: | Other events of 1894 History of France • Timeline • Years  | ||||
Events from the year 1894 in France.
Incumbents
- President: Marie François Sadi Carnot (until 26 June), Jean Casimir-Perier (starting 26 June)
 - President of the Council of Ministers: Jean Casimir-Perier (until 30 May), Charles Dupuy (starting 30 May)
 
Events
- 4 January – Franco-Russian Alliance: A military alliance is established between France and the Russian Empire, pledged to remain so as long as the Triple Alliance (1882) exists.
 - 15 February (04:51 GMT) – French anarchist Martial Bourdin attempts to destroy the Royal Observatory, London, England with a bomb.
 - 22 June – Dahomey becomes a French colony.
 - 23 June – International Olympic Committee is founded at the Sorbonne, Paris, at the initiative of Baron Pierre de Coubertin.
 - 24 June – Assassination of Marie François Sadi Carnot, President of France.[1]
 - 15 August – Sante Geronimo Caserio is executed for the assassination of Marie François Sadi Carnot.[2]
 - 15 October – Alfred Dreyfus is arrested for spying: Dreyfus affair begins.[3]
 - 5 November – Crédit Agricole established.
 - 7 November – The Masonic Grand Lodge de France is founded, splitting from the larger and older Grand Orient de France.
 - 19 December – Trial and conviction of Alfred Dreyfus begins at the Cherche-Midi prison and lasts four days.
 - 22 December – Alfred Dreyfus is convicted of treason.
 - 31 December – Dreyfus' appeal to the military court of revision — a formality — is rejected.
 - Venus of Brassempouy is discovered.
 - Émile Delahaye produces the first Delahaye automobile in Tours.[4]
 
Arts and literature
- Claude Debussy composes premieres Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune in December 1894, a symphonic poem based on Stéphane Mallarmé.
 
Births
January to June
- 12 January – Georges Carpentier, boxer (died 1975)
 - 18 January – Romain Bellenger, cyclist (died 1981)
 - 6 February – André Marchal, organist and organ teacher (died 1980)
 - 14 March – Marie-Simone Capony, teacher, fifth-oldest person in the world (died 2007)
 - 26 March – Albert Achard, World War I flying ace (died 1972)
 - 9 April – Jean Gounot, gymnast and Olympic medallist (died 1978)
 - 23 April – Georges Renavent, actor (died 1969)
 - 10 May – Paul Dujardin, water polo player and Olympic medallist (died 1959)
 - 27 May – Louis-Ferdinand Céline, writer (died 1961)
 - 2 June – Jean Gachet, boxer and Olympic medallist (died 1968)
 - 13 June – Jacques Henri Lartigue, photographer and painter (died 1986)
 
July to September
- 25 July – Yvonne Printemps, singer and actress (died 1977)
 - 19 August – André Lefèbvre, automobile engineer (died 1963)
 - 27 August – André Lurçat, architect (died 1970)
 - 3 September
- Marie Dubas, music-hall singer and comedian (died 1972)
 - André Hébuterne, painter (died 1992)
 
 - 8 September – Andrée Vaurabourg, pianist and teacher (died 1980)
 - 14 September – Pierre-Marie Théas, Bishop (died 1977)
 - 15 September – Jean Renoir, film director (died 1979)
 
October to December
- 17 October – Félix Amiot, aircraft constructor (died 1974)
 - 25 October – Claude Cahun, photographer and writer (died 1954)
 - 30 October – Jean Rostand, biologist and philosopher (died 1977)
 - 4 November – Gabriel Auphan, Admiral (died 1982)
 - 5 November – René Laforgue, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst (died 1962)
 - 7 December – Louis Béguet, rugby union player (died 1983)
 - 19 December – Paul Baudouin, banker, politician and Minister (died 1964)
 - 25 December – Maurice Floquet, France's oldest man on record (died 2006)
 
Full date unknown
- Marcel LaFosse, classical trumpeter (died 1969)
 - Georges Miquelle, cellist (died 1977)
 
Deaths
- 29 January – Armand Gautier, painter and lithographer (born 1825)
 - 3 February – Edmond Frémy, chemist (born 1814)
 - 6 February – Maria Deraismes, author and pioneer for women's rights (born 1828)
 - 9 February – Maxime Du Camp, writer and photographer (born 1822)
 - 14 February – Jacques-Léonard Maillet, sculptor (born 1823)
 - 20 May – Philippe Édouard Foucaux, Tibetologist (born 1811)
 - 25 June – Marie François Sadi Carnot, President of France (assassinated) (born 1837)
 - 1 July – Jean-Joseph Carriès, sculptor, ceramist, and miniaturist (born 1855)
 - 2 September – Pauline Duvernay, dancer (born 1813)
 - 8 November – Louis Figuier, scientist and writer (born 1819)
 - 7 December – Ferdinand de Lesseps, developer of the Suez Canal (born 1805)
 
Full date unknown
References
- ↑  Lacassagne, Alexandre (1843–1924) Auteur du texte; Poncet, A. Auteur du texte (10 April 1894). "L'assassinat du président Carnot / par A. Lacassagne,..." A. Storck. Retrieved 10 April 2018 – via gallica.bnf.fr.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ↑ "Jean-Marie Le Pen: Nie zawaham się zabić". Gazeta Wyborcza. 7 May 2017.
 - ↑ "France - The Dreyfus Affair | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-04-27.
 - ↑ Hull, Peter. "Delahaye: Famous on Road and Race Track", in Ward, Ian, executive editor. World of Automobiles (London: Orbis, 1974), Volume 5, p.521.
 
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