One of the main advocates of liberalism, both political and economic, he was a friend of
Madame de Staël,
Alessandro Manzoni and
Jean Charles Léonard de Sismondi. With a few friends, he founded the society "Aide-toi, le ciel t'aidera" (Help yourself, Heaven will help you) in order to support the Liberals in the elections of 1827. The society's efforts to increase voter registration for the opposition contributed to the defeat of the ultra-royalists in the election. Vitet unsuccessfully requested a prefecture from the
Minister of the Interior,
François Guizot; however, on 25 November Guizot created for him the new post of Inspector General of Historic Monuments, which foreshadowed the current
Ministry of Culture. The report submitted by Vitet in 1831 at the end of his first tour in the north of France shows that he was in charge not only of monuments but also of museums, libraries, archives and schools of artistic education. This report was soon used by
Victor Hugo for his pamphlet
War on the Demolishers, published in 1832. Vitet made two other tours: one to
Burgundy,
Lyon and its environs, and
Puy in 1831; the other to the southwest in 1833, which gave him the opportunity to save the cloister of
Moissac. During the
Orleanist Monarchy of
Louis-Philippe Vitet's prominence as a politician and bureaucrat emerged. He presented himself unsuccessfully to the Chamber of Deputies on 21 June 1834, as an elected representative for the 6th district of the
Seine-Maritime département (
Bolbec). But the Chamber declared the election null and void, so he stood for re-election and was successfully seated the following September 13. He made distinguished speeches in the House and defended the policy of the Ministry of the Interior. On 10 April 1836 Vitet was appointed Secretary General of the
Ministry of Commerce and as such resigned from his duties as Inspector General of Historic Monuments, which he handed over to
Prosper Mérimée, with whom he continued to closely follow questions concerning historic monuments. In 1837, he became a member of the newly created
Commission des monuments historiques, which had just been created and which awarded grants for and oversaw the restoration of historic sites. He served as vice-president of the commission from 1839 onwards. Vitet was elected to the
Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres on 15 December 1839; he was then elected to the
Académie Française on 8 May 1845, filling the vacated chair of the late
Alexandre Soumet. In 1836, Vitet was appointed simultaneously as Secretary General of the
Ministry of Finance and to the
Council of State. He also successfully stood for re-election on October 15 that year, and was successively re-elected on 4 November 1837, 2 March 1839, 9 July 1842 and 1 August 1846, serving six terms in all. In the Chamber, he voted for the endowment of the
Duke of Nemours, for the census, for the
Pritchard indemnity, and wrote the official report for the law on patents. ==Later career==