French Provisional Government of 1814
The French Provisional Government of 1814 held office during the transitional period between the defeat of Napoleon followed by the surrender of Paris on 31 March 1814 and the appointment on 13 May 1814 of the Government of the first Bourbon restoration by King Louis XVIII.
Formation of the government
On 31 March 1814 Marshal Auguste de Marmont surrendered Paris to Emperor Alexander I of Russia, who entered the city the same day. Prince Charles Maurice de Talleyrand placed his house at the Emperor's disposal. The Senate met on 1 April 1814 and, in accordance with the views expressed by Alexander I, decreed the formation of a provisional government headed by Talleyrand. The members of the Provisional Government were:- Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord
- Pierre Riel de Beurnonville
- François de Jaucourt
- Emmerich Joseph de Dalberg
- François-Xavier-Marc-Antoine de Montesquiou-Fézensac
Ministers
The Provisional Government announced the appointment of commissaires to head the ministries on 3 April 1814. They were:- Foreign Affairs: Antoine de Laforêt
- Justice: Pierre Paul Nicolas Henrion de Pansey
- Interior: Jacques Claude Beugnot
- War: Pierre Dupont de l'Étang
- Finance, Commerce and Industry: Joseph-Dominique Louis
- Navy and Colonies: Pierre-Victor Malouet
- Police: Jules Anglès
- Secretary-general: Dupont de Nemours