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Jacques Pelletier du Mans

 
French Literature Companion: Jacques Peletier du Mans

Peletier du Mans, Jacques (1517-82). French poet, critic, philosopher, and mathematician, who was equally at home with the Pléiade and the poetic and humanist circles of Lyon. He published his verse translation of Horace's Ars poetica in 1541; his Œuvres poétiques of 1547 contain translations of Homer, Virgil, Horace, and Petrarch, his own lyrical poems, notably court poems of praise and hymns of the four seasons, and also the first published poems of Du Bellay and Ronsard. His Amour des amours (1554) combines abstract, ethereal love poetry, a Dantesque search for the absolute, and cosmic, scientific description. The Art poétique (1555), written in the revised spelling proposed in his Dialogue of 1549, is the most philosophical of the contemporary manifestos, insisting on poetry as a form of knowledge which gives access to universals, on its elevated élitist role, and the mutual interaction of nature and art. In spite of his acknowledging the value of the vernacular, as his poetry, translations, and mathematical works in French attest, he ended up writing principally in Latin and on mathematical subjects. His later poems include La Savoie (1572) and Les Louanges (1581).

[Peter Sharratt]

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Jacques Peletier du Mans
Born 1517 (1517)
 France Le Mans
Died 1582 (1583)
 France Paris
Occupation Humanist, Poet, Mathematician
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Jacques Peletier du Mans (1517 – 1582) was a humanist, poet and mathematician of the French Renaissance.

Born at Le Mans into a bourgeois family, he studied at the Collège de Navarre (in Paris) where his brother Jean was a professor of mathematics and philosophy. He subsequently studied law and medicine, frequented the literary circle around Marguerite of Navarre and from 1541-43 was secretary to René du Bellay. In 1541 he published the first French translation of Horace's "Ars poetica" and during this period he also published numerous scientific and mathematical treatises.

In 1547 he pronounced a funeral oration for Henry VIII of England and published his first poems "Œuvres poétiques", which included translations from the first two cantos of Homer's Odyssey and the first book of Virgil's Georgics, twelve Petrarchian sonnets, three Horacian odes and a Martial-like epigram; this poetry collection also included the first published poems of Joachim Du Bellay and Pierre de Ronsard (Ronsard would include Jacques Peletier into his list of revolutionary contemporary poets "La Pléiade"). He then began to frequent a humanist circle around Théodore de Bèze, Jean Martin, Denis Sauvage.

Jacques Peletier tried to reform French spelling (which in the Renaissance had, through a misguided attempt to model French words on their Latin roots, acquired many inconsistencies (see Middle French)) in a treatise (1550) advocating a phonetic-based spelling using new typographic signs which Peletier would continue to use in all his published works (because of this system, "Peletier" is consistently spelled with one "l").

After years spent in Bordeaux, Poitiers, Piedmont (where Peletier may have been the tutor of the son of Maréchal de Brissac) and Lyon (where he frequented the poets and humanists Maurice Scève, Louise Labé, Olivier de Magny and Pontus de Tyard). In 1555 he published a manual of poetic composition, "Art poétique français", a Latin oration calling for peace from Henry II of France and emperor Charles V and a new collection of poetry, L'Amour des amours (consisting of a sonnet cycle and a series of encyclopedic poems describing meteors, planets and the heavens) which would influence poets Guillaume du Bartas and Jean-Antoine de Baïf.

His last years were spent in travels (Savoy, Germany, Switzerland, maybe Italy, and various regions in France) and in publishing numerous works in Latin on algebra, geometry and mathematics, medicine (a refutation of Galen, a work on the Plague). In 1572 he was briefly director of the College of Aquitaine (Bordeaux), but, bored by the position, he resigned. During this period he was friends with Michel de Montaigne and Pierre de Brach. In 1579 he returned to Paris and was named director of the College of Le Mans. A final collection of poetry "Louanges" was published in 1581.

Peletier died at Paris in July or August 1582.

Mathematical Naming Conventions

While maintaining the original system of the French mathematician Nicolas Chuquet (1485) for the names of large numbers, Jacques Peletier proposed names for the intermediate numbers. Grouping by six digits moved towards the modern grouping by three digits. The already existing series of terms ending -illion were supplemented by a related series ending -illiard, representing three powers of ten greater than the corresponding term in -illion. This convention is used widely in countries with European-derived languages, except English-language countries, Brazil, Greece, Turkey, Russia and Puerto Rico.

  The Chuquet-Peletier system (long scale)  
  Base 10     Systematics    Chuquet     Peletier       SI Prefix   
    10  0     million 0
unit
unit
(none)
    10  3     Million 0.5
thousand
thousand
k (kilo)
    10  6     Million 1
Million
Million
M (mega)
    10  9     Million 1.5
 thousand million 
Milliard
G (giga)
    10 12     Million 2
Billion
Billion
T (tera)
    10 15     Million 2.5
thousand billion
Billiard
P (peta)
    10 18     Million 3
Trillion
Trillion
E (exa)
    10 21     Million 3.5
thousand trillion
Trilliard
Z (zetta)
    10 24     Million 4
Quadrillion
Quadrillion
Y (yotta)

References

  • (French) Simonin, Michel, ed. Dictionnaire des lettres françaises - Le XVIe siècle. Paris: Fayard, 2001. ISBN 2-253-05663-4
  • Revue Historique et Archéologique du Maine, Le Mans, 2000, passim.

See also


 
 

 

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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
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