Marius Giacobbi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born(1846-09-14)14 September 1846
Lugo-de-Venaco (Venaco), Corsica, France
Died11 December 1919(1919-12-11) (aged 73)
Venaco, Corsica, France
OccupationAdvocate, politician
Jules Joseph François Marius Giacobbi
Deputy of Corsica
In office
8 May 1898  23 January 1903
Senator of Corsica
In office
4 January 1903  6 January 1912
Deputy of Corsica
In office
10 May 1914  7 December 1919
Personal details
Born(1846-09-14)14 September 1846
Lugo-de-Venaco (Venaco), Corsica, France
Died11 December 1919(1919-12-11) (aged 73)
Venaco, Corsica, France
OccupationAdvocate, politician

Jules Joseph François Marius Giacobbi (14 September 1846 – 11 December 1919) was a French lawyer and politician who was deputy or senator for Corsica from 1898 to 1919.

Marius Giacobbi was born on 14 September 1846 in Lugo-de-Venaco (Venaco), Corsica.[1] His parents were Giuseppe Maria Giacobbi (1803–1870), an advocate and historian, and Elise Annonciade Angeli (1821–1890).[2] Giacobbi became mayor of Venaco and then general councillor for Venaco.[3] On 25 March 1895 he married Marie Appolonie Stefani (born 1873) in Venaco.[2] Their son Paul Joseph Marie Giacobbi(fr) was born on 18 March 1896 in Venaco.[4] His other children included François Marie Charles Formose de Lugo Giacobbi (born 1897) and Faustine Giacobbi.[2]

First term as deputy (1898–1903)

On 8 May 1898 Giacobbi ran for election as deputy of Corte against the incumbent Luce de Casabianca(fr).[3] Both were Republican, but Giacobbi was further to the left. He won in the first round by 6,841 votes against 4,781 for Casabianca. The election was contested, but was eventually admitted. Giacobbi sat on the committees for the colonies, navigation and fishing, and in 1899 was a member of the committee on administrative economies. He did not often speak in public. He was reelected on 27 April 1902 by a clear margin.[3]

Senator (1903–12)

Giacobbi ran for election to the Senate in the triennial renewal of 4 January 1903 and was elected by 643 out of 774 voters. He sat with the democratic left. As in the chamber of deputies, he was more active in committees than in debates. He was a member of the committees on the colonies and the navy. He ran for reelection to the senate on 7 January 1912 but was defeated, with only 211 out of 776 votes.[3]

Second term as deputy (1914–19)

Notes

Sources

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