archbishop cardinal politician priest senator
He was the last surviving cardinal to have been born in the 18th century. Entering the magistracy, he became attorney-general for the district of Besançon in 1830, but having received holy orders at Strasburg, under the episcopate of Jean François Marie Lepappe de Trevern, he was made professor of sacred eloquence in the school of higher studies founded at Besançon by Cardinal de Rohan. In 1844 he was named by Rome superior of the community of Saint Louis.
In 1847 he became Bishop of Carcassonne.
He was transferred on 4 November 1854 to the see of Évreux and in 1854 raised to the archiepiscopal see of Rouen. Created cardinal in 1863, he became ex-officio senator of the empire.
The cardinal showed himself a warm advocate of the temporal power of the popes, and firmly protested against the withdrawal of the French army from the Pontifical States. In 1870, he went to Versailles, the headquarters of the German armies, to entreat Wilhelm I of Prussia to reduce the war contribution imposed on the city of Rouen.
Under the republican government he uniformly opposed the laws and measures passed against religious congregations and their schools, but endeavored to inspire his clergy to deference and conciliation in their relations with the civil authorities.
His best known work is "Introduction a la philosophie du Christianisme" (1835), two octavo volumes.