Born to Jean and Napoléon LeBeau on 19 September 1878, he was initially raised by his father to become a priest in the Church of Columbia. This was met with dismay when Phil repetitively defied his parents and grew to have a very "rebellious" personality, to go as far as reject Christianity all together. His colleagues at Rossignol University would forever regard him as an avid supporter of republicanism and the reorganization of the Columbian government. With his majors in political science and literature, he would publish several books and documents calling for the abolition of the monarchy and the institution of a presidential system, similar to the United States.
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| - Born to Jean and Napoléon LeBeau on 19 September 1878, he was initially raised by his father to become a priest in the Church of Columbia. This was met with dismay when Phil repetitively defied his parents and grew to have a very "rebellious" personality, to go as far as reject Christianity all together. His colleagues at Rossignol University would forever regard him as an avid supporter of republicanism and the reorganization of the Columbian government. With his majors in political science and literature, he would publish several books and documents calling for the abolition of the monarchy and the institution of a presidential system, similar to the United States.
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term start
| - 5(xsd:integer)
- 1922-06-13(xsd:date)
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Birth Date
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death place
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Name
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Party
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Birth Place
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term end
| - 30(xsd:integer)
- 1932-04-29(xsd:date)
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death date
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Successor
| - position abolished
- ''National Assembly dissolved
- Alexander III as absolute ruler
- William Cailloux ''
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Profession
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Children
| - Pierre
- Jean-Marie
- Matthieu
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Order
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Predecessor
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abstract
| - Born to Jean and Napoléon LeBeau on 19 September 1878, he was initially raised by his father to become a priest in the Church of Columbia. This was met with dismay when Phil repetitively defied his parents and grew to have a very "rebellious" personality, to go as far as reject Christianity all together. His colleagues at Rossignol University would forever regard him as an avid supporter of republicanism and the reorganization of the Columbian government. With his majors in political science and literature, he would publish several books and documents calling for the abolition of the monarchy and the institution of a presidential system, similar to the United States. LeBeau had amassed a small group of supporters by 1905 and formed the Social Republican Party of Columbia. The party remained small until the 15 July Scandal in 1917, which revealed that Alexander III had tampered with the elections, causing Napoléon Chuquet to win the previous elections by a landslide. LeBeau used this opportunity to speak out against the monarchy and gain strong support for the Social Republicans, exposing corruption in the Royalist Party and the king's unconstitutional interference with politics. With anti-monarchist sentiment rising, along with more exposures of King Alexander's corruption, LeBeau successfully won the chancellery elections. No more than 25 days after LeBeau's inauguration, Alexander III dissolved the Senate and arrested LeBeau. He would be incarcerated for under three months before the Republican Guard attacked his prison and set him free, starting the civil war. A bloody fight in Lavonia saw to the capture of the city and Aleexander III
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