Academy founded in 1570 by Jean-Antoine de Baïf and the musician Joachim Thibault de Courville in order to create a closer union between poetry and music. Although Baïf's experiments with classically measured poetry and phonetic orthography were central to the origins of the Académie, there was also a comprehensive programme of other cultural and physical activities designed, after the Neoplatonist manner of the Florentine academies, to harmonize body and mind, to moderate the passions, and to initiate the participants into higher intellectual and moral states. The Académie, the first French academy to be officially instituted by royal decree, attracted the best musicians and poets of the day and was active in Baïf's house in the rue des Fossés-Saint-Victor from 1571 to the death of Charles IX (1574). Under Henri III it continued to function, but was ultimately supplanted by the Académie du Palais, which met in the Louvre and centred its activities more on philosophical and moral debate and oratory. Meetings of the Académie du Palais—a distant forerunner of the Académie Française—were finally suspended in about 1584 as a result of civil war and lack of finance.
[Malcolm Quainton]




