The
Minister for the Maison du Roi under the
Ancien Régime is considered to be the precursor of the position of Minister of the Interior, which was officially established on 7 August 1790, during the
French Revolution, when
François-Emmanuel Guignard, comte de Saint-Priest became the inaugural officeholder. Although his tasks included the organisation of elections, relations with local authorities, agriculture, as well as trade, the Minister of the Interior's main duty was to oversee the functioning of police forces. This has been the case since then, with the exception of the period from 1796 to 1818, when a
Ministry of Police was in use, which was also briefly restored under the
Second Empire. During the
First Empire, the Interior Ministry's tasks were reduced; in 1824, the
Ministry of Public Instruction was established to oversee France's education policy. In 1832, the Interior Ministry was primarily occupied with the holding of elections and maintenance of the firefighters force, as the and national public libraries were transferred to the Public Instruction Ministry. In 1836, the
Ministry of Public Works, Agriculture and Commerce was established. In 1911, the Directorate of Penitentiary Administration, established in 1858 in the Interior Ministry to oversee
prison conditions, was placed under the authority of the
Minister of Justice. Nine years later, the Interior Ministry lost its public health policy department to the newly established
Ministry of Hygiene, Assistance and Social Security. ==Location==