(Redirected from Constantin-François de Chassebœuf, Comte de Volney)'Constantin François de Chassebœuf',
comte 'de Volney' (
February 3,
1757 -
April 25,
1820) was a
French philosopher, historian,
orientalist, and politician. He was at first surnamed ''Boisgirais'' after his father's estate, but afterwards assumed the name of ''Volney'' (which he had created as a
contraction of ''
Voltaire'' and ''
Ferney'').
Life
Revolution
He was born at
Craon (
Mayenne) of a
gentry family. Initially interested in Law and Medicine, he went on to study
Classical languages, and his ''Mémoire sur la Chronologie d’Hérodote'' (on
Herodotus) rose to the attention of the
Académie des Inscriptions and of the group around
Claude Adrien Helvétius. Soon after, Volnay befriended
Pierre Jean George Cabanis, the
Marquis de Condorcet, the
Baron d'Holbach, and
Benjamin Franklin.
He embarked on his journey to the East in late 1782 and reached Ottoman Egypt were he spent nearly seven months. Thereafter, he lived for nearly two years in Greater Syria in what is today Lebanon and Israel/Palestine in order to learn Arabic. He returned to France in 1785 where he spent the following two years compiling his notes and writing his ''Voyage en Egypte et en Syrie,'' which was published in 1787, and ''Considérations sur la guerre des Turcs et de la Russie'' in 1788.
He was a member both of the
Estates-General and of the
National Constituent Assembly after the outbreak of the
French Revolution. In 1791 appeared ''Les Ruines, ou méditations sur les révolutions des empires'', an essay on the
philosophy of history, containing a vision which predicts the final union of all religions by the recognition of the common truth underlying them all.
Volney tried to put his politico-economic theories into practice in
Corsica, where in
1792 he bought an
estate and made an attempt to cultivate
colonial produce. Chassebœuf de Volney was thrown into prison during the
Jacobin Club triumph, but escaped the
guillotine; he was some time
professor of history at the newly founded ''École Normale''.
Later life
In
1795 he undertook a journey to the
United States, where he was accused (
1797) by
John Adams' administration of being a French
spy sent to prepare for the reoccupation of
Louisiana by France. Consequently, he was forced to return to France in
1798. The results of his travels took form in his ''Tableau du climat et du sol des Etats-Unis'' (1803).
He was not a partisan of
Napoleon Bonaparte, but, being a moderate
Liberal, was impressed into service by the
First French Empire, and Napoleon made him a
count and put him into the
senate. After the
Bourbon Restoration he was made a
Peer of France, upon recognition of his hostility towards the Empire. Chassebœuf became a member of the
Académie française in 1795.
He died in
Paris and was buried at the
Père Lachaise.
References
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External links
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See also
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Volney prize
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Les Neuf Sœurs