Laurent Durand

Laurent Durand (1712, Paris – 1763) was an 18th-century French publisher active in the Age of Enlightenment. His shop was established rue Saint-Jacques under the sign Saint Landry & du griffon.[1]

Durand was the son of a merchant born near Auxerre. From 1730, he worked for the Parisian bookseller and printer Jacques Chardon (1688-1766). On 31 January 1739, he married Elizabeth Carbonnier, a niece of a certain François Jouenne.

He was one of the four publishers of the Encyclopédie of Diderot and d'Alembert, along with Michel-Antoine David, André le Breton, and Antoine-Claude Briasson. He also was Denis Diderot's main publisher as well as that of several clandestine books.

Works published

Bibliography

References

  1. He must not be mistaken for the bookseller-publisher P. E. G. Durand. See Robert Niklaus, Denis Diderot, Pensées philosophiques, Geneva, Droz, 1965, (p. 50) (footnote).
  2. Journal des savants (in French). 1746. p. 496.
  3. Date of his death; the publication of the Encyclopédie continued until 1772.
  4. Mercure de France, March 1759, (p. 137).
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