Adrien-Jean-Quentin Beuchot

Adrien-Jean-Quentin Beuchot (13 March 1777, Paris[1] – 8 April 1851, Paris) was an 19th-century French bibliographer.

Raised by the oratorians of Lyon, He then worked briefly with a notary, and eventually studied medicine. In 1794 he was appointed surgeon adjutant by the ninth battalion of the Isère department.

Literature

Back into civilian life as soon as it was possible for him, Beuchot published his first literary essays in the Bulletin des Petites Affiches of Lyon. In 1801 he moved to Paris where he cooperated to the Courrier des Spectacles by Édouard-Marie-Joseph Lépan and in 1802, he published with Dominique Boutard a comédie en vaudeville entitled les Prisonniers de Londres, ou les Préliminaires de paix, and inserted several light poems in different collections. In 1808, he was active with the Nouvel Almanach des Muses, and wrote several obituaries in the Décade philosophique.

Bibliography

Great editions

From 1828 to 1840 he republished the complete works of Voltaire and wrote several "Avertissements" particularly for l'Écossaise, theatre play written in 1760 (1829), but also for the Le Dictionnaire philosophique, La Henriade, l'Essai sur les mœurs and L'esprit des nations, etc.

Librarian of the House of Representatives from 1831, Beuchot retired in 1850.

Publications

References

  1. Adrien-Jean-Quentin Beuchot, BnF
  2. According to Charles du Rozoir in his article Régiment de la Calotte of the Dictionnaire de la conversation et de la lecture, inventaire raisonné des notions générales les plus indispensables à tous, par une société de savants et de gens de lettres. Sous la direction de M. W. Duckett. Paris 1853, second edition, volume 4, pages 252-254, this Oraison was inspired by the Éloge historique ou l'histoire panégyrique et caractéristique d'Emmanuel de Torsac, monarque universel du monde sublunaire, généralissime du Régiment de la calotte, prononcé au Champ de Mars, et dans la chaire d'Érasme, par un orateur du Régiment, s. d. (1724).

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.