Albert Gautier Vignal Explained

Honorific Prefix:Comte
Birth Name:Albert-Joseph Gautier
Birth Date:26 May 1854
Birth Place:Nice, France
Death Place:Lausanne, Switzerland
Nationality:French, Monegasque
Other Names:Albert Gauthier
Spouse:

Albert-Joseph Gautier Vignal (26 May 1854 – 18 October 1939) was a French-Monegasque nobleman and tycoon who sponsored various sports in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, particularly fencing.

Early life

Gautier was from a French noble family that settled in Monaco in the early 1820s, eventually becoming leading figures in the business. Born on 26 May 1854 in Nice, he was a son of Hélène Sicard (b. 1831) and Paul Gautier (1819–1872), who served as president of the Chamber of Commerce in Nice.

Career

A close friend of the Baron de Coubertin, Gautier founded the Monegasque Olympic Committee in 1907 and, from 1908 until his death, represented Monaco on the International Olympic Committee.[1] He was a leading figure in developing fencing as a competitive sport, and Monaco as a sporting destination.[2] In 1933 he became an honorary member of the International Fencing Federation (FIE).[3]

Outside of sport, he was president of various banks as well as the Nice Electricity Company, and Consul-General for Romania in Nice.[4]

Honors and awards

In 1895 Gautier was ennobled and created Count Gautier Vignal by Pope Leo XIII in recognition of his dedication to the Holy See. He was also made an Officer of the Legion of Honour in 1935, a Commander of the Order of the Crown of Romania, a Commander of the Swedish Order of Vasa, an Officer of the Order of the Star of Romania and a member of the Order of Polonia Restituta.[2]

Personal life

On 14 May 1883 in Nice, Gautier married Marie Boutau (1857–1910), a daughter of Jean Boutau and Agathe Désirée Perier. Together, they were the parents of:[5]

After the death of his first wife in 1910, he married London born Edith Emma Schiff (1871–1953) on 29 April 1911 in Nice. A sister of Sidney Schiff and Marie Schiff (Baroness de Marwicz), they were children of stockbroker Alfred George Schiff.[9]

The Count Gautier Vignal died on 18 October 1939 at Lausanne, Switzerland.[2]

Descendants

Through his daughter Thérèse, he was a grandfather of Odile Marguerite Marie Marthe Madelene Sublet d'Heudicourt de Lenoncourt (1914–1994), who married Henri de Gramont, 13th Duke of Gramont in 1949.[11]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Monegasque Olympic Committee - Paris 1924 . www.comite-olympique.mc . 20 September 2024.
  2. Web site: Albert, Comte Gautier-Vignal . www.olympedia.org . 20 September 2024.
  3. Web site: FIE Statutes . . 78.
  4. Biographies of IOC Members Part III. 52. Journal of Olympic History. 17. 3. 2009.
  5. Book: Cocteau . Jean . Biagini . Jacques . Jean Cocteau-- de Villefranche sur Mer: anthologie de textes, lettres, témoignages, illustrés et commentés . 2007 . SERRE EDITEUR . 978-2-86410-489-6 . 16 . 20 September 2024 . fr.
  6. News: John Meredith Read Married; Albany Man Weds Countess Alix de Foras at Rome. . . Albany, New York . 1 . April 1, 1901 . 2021-05-05 . Newspapers.com.
  7. Book: Furgaux . Robert . Lenoncourt en Lorraine . 1 January 1979 . 978-2-307-29537-2 . 25 . 20 September 2024 . fr.
  8. Web site: GAUTIER dit GAUTIER VIgnal Eugène Louis Paul Albert, (Nice, Alpes Maritimes), 027ème BCA Nos ancêtres de 14/18 . tadoukoz.net . 20 September 2024.
  9. Book: Klaidman . Stephen . Sydney and Violet: Their Life with T.S. Eliot, Proust, Joyce and the Excruciatingly Irascible Wyndham Lewis . 3 September 2013 . Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group . 978-0-385-53410-9 . 14 . 20 September 2024 . en.
  10. Book: Figaro: artistique illustré . 1933 . Édition de Figaro . 412 . 20 September 2024 . fr.
  11. Book: Jaurgain . Jean de . La Maison de Gramont, 1040-1967 ... . 1968 . les Amis du Musée pyrénéen, [place de l'Église,] . 656 . 20 September 2024 . fr.