Louis Gautier

Louis Gautier (22 January 1810 – 26 January 1884) was a French Bonapartist politician who was a deputy for Charente during the French Third Republic.

Louis Gautier
Deputy for Charente
In office
5 March 1876  15 November 1879
Personal details
Born(1810-01-22)22 January 1810
Aigre, Charente, France
Died26 January 1884(1884-01-26) (aged 74)
Fouqueure, Charente, France
NationalityFrench
OccupationPolitician

Life

Louis Gautier was born on 22 January 1810 in Aigre, Charente.[1] He became an eau de vie merchant in Aigre, and a Charente district councilor. He was allied with the André family of Charente and shared their Bonapartist sympathies, which helped him enter politics. He did not run for election to the legislature until the general elections of 1876.[2]

Gautier was elected Deputy of Charent on 5 March 1876 and took his seat with the Appel au peuple parliamentary group.[1] He did not take part in debates, but voted regularly with the conservative minority. He voted for the government in the 16 May 1877 crisis.[2] After the Chamber was dissolved he was reelected as a Bonapartist and as official candidate on 14 October 1877, and again sat with the Bonapartists of the right. He resigned as deputy on 15 November 1879. His son, René François Gautier, was elected in his place on 29 February 1880.[2]

Louis Gautier died on 26 January 1884 in Fouqueure, Charente.[1]

Notes

    Sources

    • Louis Gautier (in French), Assemblée nationale, retrieved 2018-01-27
    • Robert, Adolphe; Cougny, Gaston (1889–1891), "GAUTIER (LOUIS)", in Edgar Bourloton (ed.), Dictionnaire des Parlementaires français (1789–1889) (in French), retrieved 2018-01-26
    gollark: For example, send a request to `https://interweb.site/search-some-private-data?query=thing` using a form or `img` or `script` or whatever, and see how long it takes (using `onload`/`onerror` handlers and such).
    gollark: The timing attacks thing: since you can send GET requests to domains you probably shouldn't be able to, and time how long they take, you can infer some data you shouldn't be able to from other domains.
    gollark: It is not okay, it is bees.
    gollark: Because you can access cross-domain scripts and images without explicit optin by the site they're from, guess what? TIMING ATTACKS, *and* you can check whether there's an image or not at some arbitrary URL because while CORS weirdness won't let your code read the *content* of an image you include with `<img>` unless the site it's from opts in, you can check the width/height and whether it loaded or not.
    gollark: But there is more!
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.