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Claude Fauchet

 

Fauchet, Claude (1530-1602). A friend of Pasquier, with whom he shared a keen interest in French history and institutions—witness his Recueil des antiquités gauloises (1579, 1599) and his Recueil de l'origine de la langue et poésie françaises (1581). His work is noteworthy for his critical interest in medieval philology and for his use of manuscript sources.

[James Supple]

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Claude Fauchet
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Fauchet, Claude (klōd fōshā'), 1744-93, French clergyman and revolutionary, constitutional bishop of Calvados. A leader in the attack (1789) on the Bastille, Fauchet was a member of the Commune of Paris, of the Legislative Assembly, and of the Convention. Self-styled the Attorney General of the Truth, he sided with the Girondists; after their fall he was executed.
Wikipedia: Claude Fauchet (historian)
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Claude Fauchet (3 July 1530 - January 1602) was a French historian and antiquary.

He was born at Paris; of his early life few particulars are known. He applied himself to the study of the early French chroniclers, and proposed to publish extracts which would throw light on the first periods of the monarchy. During the Wars of Religion, when he was forced to flee Paris with Henri III in 1589 and could not return until 18 April 1594, he lost a large part of his books and manuscripts to the soldiers of the duc de Mayenne. His losses he accounted to be about two thousand books and manuscripts, possibly an exaggeration (Holmes and Radoff 1929). He then settled at Marseilles.

Attaching himself afterwards to François de Tournon, he accompanied him in 1554 to Italy, whence he was several times sent on embassies to the king, with reports on the siege of Siena. His services at length procured him the post of president of the Chambre des Monnaies (29 March 1569, and thus enabled him to resume his literary studies.

Having become embarrassed with debt, he found it necessary in 1599, at the age of seventy, to sell his office; but Henri IV, amused with an epigram, eventually pensioned him, with the title of historiographer of France.

Fauchet has the reputation of an impartial and scrupulously accurate writer; and in his works are to be found important facts not easily accessible elsewhere. He was, however, entirely uncritical, and his style is singularly inelegant. His principal works (1579, 1599), taken together, form a history of antiquities of Gaul and of Merovingian and Carolingian France, and reviews of the dignities and magistrates of France, of the origin of the French language and poetry, of the liberties of the Gallican church. A collected edition in a single massive volume was published in 1610. Fauchet took part in a translation of the Annals of Tacitus (1582).

Notes

References

  • Urban T. Holmes and Maurice L. Radoff "Claude Fauchet and His Library" PMLA 44.1 (March 1929), pp. 229-242. Brief details of his life, lists of published works, of volumes identified as from his library and works cited by Fauchet.
  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

 
 

 

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French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Claude Fauchet (historian)" Read more