Order of Saint Alexander Nevsky awarded in 1917 to the French Minister of the Colonies Gaston Doumergue

Full set made by Eduard workshop https://asiamedals.info/threads/orders-of-st-alexander-nevsky-made-by-eduard-il-or-vd.23597/.

Cross.

Gold, enamel.
Size 57 x 53 mm.
Weight 34.74 g.

Marked with a maker's mark VD /ВД/, Eduard /Эдуард/ and barely readable St. Petersburg assay office gold hallmark from 1908+ time period.

Order of Saint Alexander Nevsky awarded in 1917 to Gaston Doumergue.jpg


Medallion.jpg


Order of Saint Alexander  Nevsky awarded in 1917 to Gaston Doumergue.jpg



Breast star.

Silver, gilt, enamel.
Size 93 mm.
Weight 73 g.

Marked with a St. Petersburg assay office silver hallmark “84” from 1908+ time period with a female head to the right, VD /ВД/ and the company “Eduard”.


Order of Saint Alexander Nevsky awarded in 1917 to  Gaston Doumergue.jpg


Order of Saint Alexander Nevsky awarded in 1917 to Gaston  Doumergue.jpg


Original case.

Case.jpg


Case was made by Petrov workshop.

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Pierre Paul Henri Gaston Doumergue (1 August 1863 in Aigues-Vives, Gard – 18 June 1937 in Aigues-Vives) was a French politician who served as President of France from 1924 to 1931. Tasked with important ministerial portfolios, he was first appointed President of the Council of Ministers in 1913, but was forced to leave power a few months after his appointment. He was elected as President of the Senate in 1923. At the end of his mandate as President of France, refusing to compete against his eventual successor, Doumergue retired, but chaired a government of national unity during the crisis created by the riots of 6 February 1934.

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On 3 August 1914, the day of Germany's declaration of war on France, marking the start of World War I, the new president of the council, René Viviani, called on Doumergue to replace him at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, during the composition of his short-lived first government. Then, he was minister of the colonies in the successive governments from 26 August 1914 to 19 March 1917. During this mandate, in the middle of the war, he ensured the security of French possessions and set up a secret agreement with Tsar Nicholas II of Russia which defined the demands that France and Russia would make in future peace negotiations with Germany and Austria-Hungary. However, this treaty became null and void following the October Revolution.​
 
Monday, January 29, 1917.​

The French, British and Italian delegates to the allied conference arrived in Petrograd this morning.

It has only taken them three days to come from Port Romanov, and their train is the first to traverse the Murman coast line from end to end.

Leaving General de Castelnau to the care of my military attaché, I took Doumergue to the Hotel de l'Europe.

He asked me about the internal situation in Russia. I painted it without sparing the darker colours, and drew the inference that it was necessary to hasten military events.

"On the Russian front," I said, "time is not working for us now. The public does not care about the war. All the government departments and the machinery of administration are getting hopelessly and progressively out of gear. The best minds are convinced that Russia is walking straight into the abyss. We must make haste."

"I didn't think the mischief had got so far."

"You'll be able to see for yourself." He then told me in confidence that the Government of the Republic is anxious to secure the Emperor's express promise that the peace treaty shall include a clause giving France full liberty to decide the fate of the territories on the left bank of the Rhine.

I reminded him that the question of the Rhine Provinces was settled between France and Russia long ago, at any rate so far as the "war map" made it possible.

"In November 1914 the Emperor told me on his own initiative that he unreservedly gave us the left bank of the Rhine; he said so again on the 13th March last year. What more could we want?"

"But Monsieur Briand thinks we ought to bind the Russian Government by a written and detailed record ... We cannot be too careful in so serious a matter."

After a private luncheon at the embassy, I took Doumergue and General de Castelnau to the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, where the conference was to hold a preliminary and official sitting to lay the foundations for its work.

The following representatives were present:

Russian: Pokrovsky, Foreign Minister; the Grand Duke Sergei Michailovich, Inspector-General of Artillery; M. Woynovski, Minister of Communications; M. Bark, Finance Minister; General Bielaïev, War Minister; General Gourko, Chief of Staff to the High Command; Admiral Grigorovitch, Minister for the Navy; M. Sazonov, who has just been appointed ambassador in London, and M. Neratov, assistant to the Minister for Foreign Affairs

French: M. Doumergue, Minister for the Colonies General de Castelnau and myself:

English: Lord Milner, minister without portfolio, Sir George Buchanan; Lord Revelstoke and General Sir Henry Wilson:

Italian: Signor Scialoja, minister without portfolio; the Marchese Carlotti and General Count Ruggieri.

At the very outset it appeared that the governments of the western Powers had only given their delegates vague instructions; no directing principle to co-ordinate the allied effort and no joint programme to hasten the common victory. After a prolonged exchange of generalities, the emptiness of which everyone felt, we modestly agreed to say that the recent conferences in Paris and Rome had sufficiently defined the object of the present meeting. We next decided that questions of a political nature should be examined by the chief delegates and ambassadors; plans of operations should be settled by the generals; a technical committee should look into questions of matériel, munitions, transport, etc.; final decisions to be taken by the full conference.

Paleologue, Maurice An Ambassador's Memoirs, Vol. 3 /chapter 7 January 29-February 21, 1917/.​


The exact date of the Doumergue award ceremony is unknown. General de Castelnau, who accompanied Doumergue, received the Order of Saint Alexander Nevsky on February 6, 1917. It is reasonable to assume that the latter also received the order on this date.​
 
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