Rémy Montagne | |
Birth Date: | 9 January 1917 |
Birth Place: | Mirabeau, Vaucluse, France |
Death Place: | Louviers, Eure, France |
Occupation: | Lawyer, politician, media proprietor |
Party: | Union for French Democracy |
Spouse(S): | Geneviève Michelin |
Children: | 7, including Vincent Montagne |
Relatives: | Martial Montagne (brother) François Michelin (brother-in-law) |
Rémy Montagne (in French ʁemi mɔ̃taɲ/; 9 January 1917 – 10 January 1991) was a French lawyer, politician and media proprietor. He was a member of the National Assembly from 1958 to 1980.
Rémy Montagne was born on 9 January 1917 in Mirabeau.[1] He was a member of the Association catholique de la jeunesse française as a young man.[2] He was an avid reader of Jacques Maritain and became friends with Maurice Blondel, two Catholic philosophers.[2]
During World War II, he was openly opposed to the Nazis.[2] In 1940, at a meeting of young Catholics in Aix-en-Provence, he expressed his intention to fight back against the German invaders, adding that the real battle consisted in resisting against the totalitarianism of the Hitlerian ideology.[2] Six months later, he lost an eye in battle, and his brother Martial was deported to the Dora concentration camp, where he was murdered by the Nazis.[2]
Montagne started his career as a lawyer shortly after the war, in 1945.[1] [2] He founded L’Eure-Éclair, a weekly newspaper, in 1954.[2]
He served as the Union for French Democracy member of the National Assembly for the 3rd district of Eure from 1958 to 1980.[2] [3] He was then appointed Secretary of State to the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs, where he served for nine months between 1980 and 1981.[2]
In 1985, he founded Ampère, a publishing house.[2] It changed its name to Média-Participations in 1989.[4]
He married Geneviève Michelin, the sister of automobile heir François Michelin, on 3 May 1945.[2] They had seven children.[2]
He died in 1991.[4] His biography, authored by Marie-Joëlle Guillaume, was published in 2010.[2] [3]