Émile Deschanel

Émile Auguste Étienne Martin Deschanel ( born November 14, 1819 in Paris, † January 26, 1904 ) was a French writer and politician.

Deschanel was a professor at Bourges, and later in Paris, but was dismissed due to his political writing " Catholicisme et Socialisme " in 1850. Subsequently, Deschanel devoted himself entirely to the spread of republican ideas through the press, and often appeared as a speaker. In 1851 he had to flee from Paris and lived 1851-1859 in exile, among others, in Brussels, where he held very visited literary lectures and was when he returned to Paris in 1859, employees of the "Journal des Débats ". In 1876 he was Republican member of the Chamber of Deputies, and in 1881 was appointed professor of modern literature at the Collège de France and senator of the third French Republic for life. His son Paul Deschanel was French politician and President of the Third Republic.

Works

  • Les Courtisanes grecques (par. 1859)
  • Histoire de la conversation ( 1857)
  • Le mal et le bien qu'on a dit des femmes ( 7th ed 1867)
  • La vie des comédiens (1860 )
  • Causeries de quinzaine (1861 )
  • Christophe Colomb et Vasco de Gama (1862 )
  • Physiology of écrivains et des artistes (1864 )
  • Études sur Aristophane ( new ed 1877)
  • A bâtons rompus (a collection of moral and literary essays, 1868)
  • Le peuple et la bourgeoisie (1881 )
  • Le romantisme of Classiques, 6 vols, Paris 1883-1898, Geneva 1970
  • Senator (France)
  • University teachers ( Collège de France)
  • Romance
  • Frenchman
  • Born in 1819
  • Died in 1904
  • Man
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