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Georges-Eugène Haussmann
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===Downfall=== During the first half of the reign of Napoleon III, the French legislature had little real power. All decisions were made by the Emperor. Beginning in 1860, however, Napoleon decided to liberalise the Empire and give legislators power. The members of the opposition in the parliament increasingly aimed their criticism of Napoleon III at Haussmann, criticising his spending and high-handed attitude toward the parliament. The cost of the reconstruction projects was also rising rapidly. In December 1858 the Council of State ruled that a property owner whose land was expropriated could retain the land that was not specifically needed for the street, greatly increasing the cost of expropriation. Property owners also became much more clever in claiming higher payments for their buildings, often by creating sham shops and businesses within their buildings. The cost of expropriations jumped from 70 million francs for the first projects to about 230 million francs for the second wave of projects.<ref>De Moncan, ''Le paris d'Haussmann'', p. 123.</ref> In 1858, the Cour des Comptes, which oversaw the finances of the Empire, ruled that the Caisses des Grands Travaux was operating illegally by making "disguised loans" to private companies. The court ruled that such loans had to be approved by the parliament. The parliament was asked to approve a loan of 250 millions francs in 1865, and another 260 million francs in 1869.<ref>De Moncan, ''Le paris d'Haussmann'', p. 123.</ref> The members of the opposition were particularly outraged when in 1866 he took away part of the Luxembourg to make room for the new avenue between the Luxembourg Gardens and the Observatory, and destroyed the old garden nursery which lay between rue Auguste Comte, rue d'Assas and the avenue de l'Observatoire. When the Emperor and Empress attended a performance at the Odeon Theater, near the Luxembourg gardens, members of the audience shouted "Dismiss Haussmann!" and jeered the Emperor.<ref>De Moncan, ''Le paris d'Haussmann'', p. 123.</ref> Nonetheless, the Emperor stood by Haussmann. [[File:Mémoires Haussmann 1890.jpeg|thumb|upright=0.7|Title page of ''Memoires'' by Haussmann, Victor Havard Publisher, 1890.]] One of the leaders of the parliamentary opposition to Napoleon, [[Jules François Camille Ferry|Jules Ferry]], ridiculed the accounting practices of Haussmann as ''Les Comptes fantastiques de Haussmann'', or "The fantastic accounts of Haussmann", in 1867, a play on words of "Les Contes Fantastiques de Hoffmann", [[The Tales of Hoffmann|The Fantastical Tales of Hoffmann]].<ref name="EB1911"/> The republican opposition to Napoleon III won many parliamentary seats in the [[1869 French legislative election|1869 elections]], and increased its criticism of Haussmann. Napoleon III gave in to the criticism and named an opposition leader and fierce critic of Haussmann, [[Emile Ollivier]], as his new prime minister. Haussmann was invited to resign. Haussmann refused to resign, and was relieved of his duties by the Emperor. Six months later, during the [[Franco-German War]], Napoleon III was captured by the Germans, and the Empire was overthrown. In his memoires, Haussmann had this comment on his dismissal: "In the eyes of the Parisians, who like routine in things but are changeable when it comes to people, I committed two great wrongs; over the course of seventeen years I disturbed their daily habits by turning Paris upside down, and they had to look at the same face of the Prefect in the Hotel de Ville. These were two unforgivable complaints."<ref>Haussmann, ''Mémoires'', cited in Maneglier, Hervé, ''Paris Impérial'', p. 262.</ref> After the fall of Napoleon III, Haussmann spent about a year abroad, but he re-entered public life in 1877, when he became [[Bonapartist]] deputy for [[Ajaccio]].<ref name="EB1911"/> His later years were occupied with the preparation of his ''Mémoires'' (three volumes, 1890–1893).<ref name="EB1911"/>
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