Lawyer and senator of France, born on the 28th of October 1825, in Paris. His practice as a lawyer was begun in the city of his birth, in 1852, and from that date his fame rapidly grew until he became one of the best-known advocates of his time. His political activity began in 1861, when he was elected a member of the Council-General of Vendôme. His election to the National Assembly took place in 1871. In 1876 he was chosen Senator for Loir-et-Cher, and was re-elected in 1879 and 1888. M. Bozérian was prominent in the discussion of all national questions of a financial or judicial nature. He published, in 1858, The Bourse, Its Operators and Operations, Viewed from the Standpoint of the Law, of Jurisprudence and of Political and Social Economy; in 1884, Study upon the Revision of the Constitution of 1875. A. noteworthy essay of his, read before the Religious Society of the Christian Alliance, of which he became president in 1862, discusses a parallel between Fénelon and William Ellery Channing. M. Bozérian became an officer of the Legion of Honor, December 11, 1880.