Among the many figures who contributed to the growth and refinement of classical liberalism in Europe, few are more deserving of renewed attention than Charles Forbes René de Montalembert (1810–1870). A French Catholic nobleman, publicist, parliamentarian, and intellectual, Montalembert stood at the center of the 19th century struggle to reconcile Catholicism with political liberty at a time when both reactionary monarchists and militant secularists claimed exclusive ownership of France’s future. His life and writings offer a vision of liberty that is moral, pluralistic, and resistant to the centralizing ambitions of the modern state—precisely the kind of vision Ralph Raico argued must remain at the heart of any authentic liberal tradition.
Born into an aristocratic family exiled by the Revolution, Montalembert came of age during the Bourbon Restoration and early July Monarchy. He received a classical and Catholic education, steeped in the writings of Chateaubriand, Lamennais, and other thinkers seeking a path between reaction and revolution. The experience of living between these extremes shaped the core of his beliefs: that liberty and religion were not enemies, but natural allies; that decentralization was essential to political freedom; and that the state, when unchecked, tended toward spiritual and administrative despotism.
A member of the Chamber of Peers beginning in 1831, Montalembert quickly became one of the leading voices of Liberal Catholicism—a movement that championed freedom of the press, local self-government, constitutional limits on power, and the independence of the Church from political manipulation. His parliamentary speeches and essays consistently defended these principles, even when doing so placed him at odds with both reactionaries and anticlericals.
At the heart of Montalembert’s worldview was a conviction that human dignity, conscience, and free association exist prior to the state. This meant political liberty was not a gift to be conferred by rulers but a recognition of natural rights that could be violated but never erased. He believed that the state’s role must be strictly limited: “The State cannot be the guardian of all,” he warned, “for in guarding all it destroys the liberty of each.”
Several central themes recur in his work: Freedom of education and religion, especially against statist centralization; the autonomy of local institutions—municipalities, parishes, voluntary associations—which he saw as the true schools of citizenship; opposition to bureaucratic uniformity and the tendency of modern governments toward surveillance and control; and the moral basis of liberalism, which he argued depended not on radical individualism but on the cultivation of virtue within civil society.
In these positions, Montalembert represents a continuity with earlier classical liberals like Benjamin Constant and a precursor to later Catholic liberals such as Lord Acton.
One of Ralph Raico’s most important contributions to the study of liberalism was his insistence that the tradition did not arise solely from Anglo-American or secular Enlightenment sources. Instead, as Raico wrote in his tremendous essays on the centrality of French liberalism and on the place of religion in the liberalism of Constant, Tocqueville, and Acton, liberalism drew from a rich transnational constellation of thinkers, including Catholic and Continental intellectuals who fused individual rights with a respect for organic social institutions.
Raico understood that Montalembert and his fellow Liberal Catholics advanced one of liberalism’s most essential insights: that the greatest historical threat to liberty has been centralized political authority—whether monarchical, democratic, or bureaucratic. Their defense of intermediate bodies—church, family, guilds, municipalities—was not an obstruction to liberty but the very condition of its existence.
In this sense, Montalembert provides a crucial example of what Raico called the “older, richer liberal tradition”—a tradition that treasures decentralization, voluntary association, and moral independence from the state.
In an era when modern governments increasingly claim responsibility for education, speech, morality, and the regulation of nearly all social life, Montalembert’s warnings appear strikingly prescient. The administrative centralization he opposed in 19th-century France is now a global phenomenon, intensified by technology, bureaucracy, and democratic absolutism. His insistence that the state is inherently tempted to encroach upon civil society resonates powerfully in our time.
Likewise, his belief that liberalism cannot endure without strong, independent institutions outside the state—charities, religious communities, families, local associations—offers a needed corrective to the sterile, individualistic caricature of liberalism that dominates much contemporary discourse. Without these mediating bodies, freedom becomes vulnerable to both political and cultural centralization.
Finally, Montalembert’s synthesis of Catholic moral philosophy and liberal political principles remains one of the most sophisticated attempts to defend liberty on spiritual as well as rational grounds. In an age marked by ideological polarization and renewed state intervention, his work invites readers to rediscover a classical liberalism that is humane, rooted, and resistant to power.
If the classical liberal tradition is to remain vital in the 21st century, it must recover figures like Montalembert—thinkers who understood that liberty is not merely a constitutional arrangement but a moral order upheld by independent institutions and a vigilant citizenry. As Ralph Raico taught, the struggle for liberty is historical and ongoing. In Charles de Montalembert, we find not only a forgotten champion of that struggle, but one whose principles deserve renewed attention today.