Pierre-Nicolas Chantreau

Pierre Nicolas Chantreau, called don Chantreau, (1741, Paris – 25 October 1808, Auch) was an 18th-century French historian, journalist, grammarian and lexicographer.

Biography

Around 1762, at the age of twenty or twenty-one, he traveled to Spain to become a teacher of French at the Royal School of Ávila. He published a French grammar for use by Hispanics which earned him to enter the Real Academia Española and receive the title of don Chantreau. Back in France in 1782, he joined the revolutionary ideas and became an employee at the libraries section of the Comité d'instruction publique. In 1792, he was appointed responsible for an investigation to the Spanish border, secret mission whose purpose was to ensure the feelings of Catalans to the French Revolution. In 1794,he proposed the departmental director of Gers the creation of an educational newspaper Les Documents de la raison, feuille antifanatique, then wrote the Courrier du département du Gers. He was later a teacher of history at the école centrale in Auch in 1796, then at the l'École militaire, then based in Fontainebleau, in 1803[1]

While his historical charts and chronologies quickly fell into oblivion, his lexicon of the words of the Revolution inspired Louis-Sébastien Mercier a Néologie ou vocabulaire de mots nouveaux and his French grammar, of which several editions followed one another until 1926, was a milestone in the history of language teaching in Spain.

Works

Bibliography

References

  1. Biographical element after the catalog of the Bibliothèque nationale de France and L'Intermédiaire des chercheurs et curieux, year 1892, 2nd semester, (p. 467).
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.