French architects active from the reign of Louis Quinze (1715–74) to that of Louis-Philippe (1830–48). The most distinguished members were Marie-Joseph (1730–85) and his younger brother Antoine-François (1739–1823). Marie-Joseph, a pupil of Blondel, was an influential innovator who shot to fame with his Œuvres d'architecture (1765), which featured several vast Neo-Classical schemes that had an immense effect on architecture for the next few decades. In particular, his studies of Antique Roman remains (with de Wailly and Moreau-Desproux) had prompted his advocacy of ingenious internal planning with top-lit rooms, something that was to influence Adam, the younger
M.-J. Peyre's son, Antoine-Marie Peyre (1770–1843), was for a time aide-de-camp to General M.-J.-P.-Y. Roch Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de La Fayette (1757–1834), and subsequently had a career as an architect in Paris.
Bibliography
- Builder (1980)
- Middleton & Watkin (1987)
- Jane Turner (1996)
- Watkin & Mellinghoff (1987)
The full bibliography for this book is available to download as a pdf file.
Download the bibliography for A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (PDF: 1.2MB)




