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Jules Michelet

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Jules Michelet
Portrait by Thomas Couture, c. 1865
Born(1798-08-21)21 August 1798
Paris, France
Died9 February 1874(1874-02-09) (aged 75)
Hyères, France
Alma materUniversity of Paris
Occupations
  • Historian
  • writer
  • philosopher
  • teacher
Spouses
EraModern philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolAnti-clericalism
Freethought
Republicanism
Main interests
French history

Jules Michelet (French: [ʒyl miʃlɛ]; 21 August 1798 – 9 February 1874)[3] was a French historian and writer. He is best known for his multivolume work Histoire de France (History of France),[4] which is considered a foundational text in modern historiography. Michelet was influenced by Giambattista Vico; he admired Vico's emphasis on the role of people and their customs in shaping history, which was a major departure from the emphasis on political and military leaders.[5] Michelet also drew inspiration from Vico's concept of the "corsi e ricorsi", or the cyclical nature of history, in which societies rise and fall in a recurring pattern.

In Histoire de France, Michelet coined the term Renaissance (meaning "rebirth" in French) as a period in Europe's cultural history that reflected a clear break, away from the Middle Ages. This subsequently created a modern understanding of humanity and its place in the new, "re-birthed" world. The term "rebirth" and its association with the Renaissance can be traced to a work published in 1550 by the Italian art historian Giorgio Vasari. Vasari used the term to describe the advent of a new manner of painting that began with the work of Giotto, as the "rebirth (rinascita) of the arts". Michelet thereby became the first historian to use and define the French translation of the term, Renaissance,[6] to identify the period in Europe's cultural history that followed the Middle Ages.[7]

Historian François Furet described Histoire de France as "the cornerstone of revolutionary historiography' and 'a literary monument."[8]

Early life

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Michelet's father was a master printer, and Jules would assist him with his work. At one point, he was offered a spot at the imperial printing office, but instead he attended the famous Collège of Lycée Charlemagne, where he distinguished himself. He passed the university examination in 1821 and was soon appointed to a professorship of history in the Collège Rollin.[3]

Soon after this, in 1824, he married Pauline Rousseau, during what was considered an extraordinarily favorable period for scholars and men of letters in France. Michelet had powerful patrons in Abel-François Villemain and Victor Cousin, among others. Although he was an ardent politician (having from his childhood embraced republicanism and a peculiar variety of romantic free-thought), he was, above all, a man of letters and an inquirer into the history of the past. His earliest works were school textbooks.[3]

Between 1825 and 1827 he produced diverse sketches, chronological tables and other works relating to modern history. His précis of the subject was published in 1827. In the same year he was appointed maître de conférences at the École normale supérieure.[3] Four years later, in 1831, he wrote his Introduction à l'histoire universelle.

Record Office

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The events of 1830[vague] had placed Michelet in a better position for study by obtaining him a place in the Record Office and a deputy-professorship under the historian Guizot in the literary faculty of the university. Soon afterward he began his magnum opus, the Histoire de France, which would take 30 years to complete. But he accompanied this with numerous other books, chiefly of erudition, such as the Œuvres choisies de Vico, the Mémoires de Luther écrits par lui-même, the Origines du droit français, and somewhat later, the le Procès des Templiers.[3]

1838 was a year of great importance in Michelet's life. During that time, he at the height of his powers. His studies had fed his natural aversion to the principles of authority and ecclesiasticism, and when the revival of Jesuit activity caused some alarm, he was appointed to the chair of history at the Collège de France. Assisted by his friend Edgar Quinet, he began a violent polemic against the religious order and the principles that it represented, a polemic that made their lectures, especially Michelet's, among the most popular of the day.[3]

His first wife died in 1839 and he would remain unmarried for a decade. He published his Histoire romaine in that year, but this was in his graver and earlier manner. The results of his lectures appeared in the volumes Du prêtre, de la femme et de la famille and Le peuple. These books do not display the apocalyptic style which, partly borrowed from Lamennais, characterizes Michelet's later works, but they contain, in miniature, almost the whole of his curious ethico-politico-theological creed—a mixture of sentimentalism, communism, and anti-sacerdotalism, supported by the most eccentric arguments, but urged with a great deal of eloquence.[3]

The principles of the outbreaks of 1848 were in the air and Michelet was one of many who condensed and propagated them: his original lectures were of so incendiary a kind that the course had to be interdicted. However, when the revolution broke out, Michelet, unlike many other men of letters, did not attempt to enter active political life. choosing instead to devote himself more strenuously to his literary work. Besides continuing the Histoire de France, he undertook and carried out an enthusiastic Histoire de la Révolution française during the years between the downfall of Louis Philippe and the final establishment of Napoleon III.[3]

In 1849, at the age of 51, he married his second wife, 23-year-old Athénaïs Michelet (née Mialaret). She was a woman of some literary capacity as a natural history writer and memoirist, who had republican sympathies. She had been a teacher in St. Petersburg before their extensive correspondence led to marriage. They entered into a shared literary life and she would assist him significantly in his endeavors as well. He openly acknowledged this, although she never was given credit in his works.

Minor works

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After the coup d'état by Napoleon III, in 1852 Michelet lost his position in the Record Office when he refused to swear fealty to the empire.[9] The new regime rekindled his republican zeal, further stimulated by his second marriage to Athénaïs. While his Histoire remained his main pursuit, a crowd of lesser works accompanied and diversified it. Sometimes they were expanded versions of its episodes, sometimes what may be called commentaries or companion volumes. The first of these was Les Femmes de la Révolution (1854), in which Michelet's dithyrambic often gives way to tedious and inconclusive writing.

L'Insecte followed. It was succeeded by L'Amour (1859), one of Michelet's most popular books.

In the next, L'Oiseau (1856), Michelet ventured into natural history, a subject new to him, having been introduced to it by his second wife. L'Oiseau was treated from the point of view of Michelet's pantheism,[3] instead of science or sentiment.

Vincent van Gogh inscribed his drawing, Sorrow, with a quote from "La Femme": "Comment se fait-il qu'il y ait sur la terre une femme seule?", which translates to How can there be on earth a woman alone?

These works – half pamphlets, half moral treatises – succeeded each other at twelve-month intervals as a rule, and the succession was almost unbroken for five or six years.

La Femme (1860) followed L'Amour. It was a book on which a whole critique of French literature and French character might be founded.[3] Vincent van Gogh inscribed a quote he took from La Femme on his drawing, Sorrow.[10] It reads, "Comment se fait-il qu'il y ait sur la terre une femme seule?" (How can there be on earth a woman alone?).

La Mer followed in 1861, along L’Oiseau (1856), L’Insecte (1858), and La Montagne (1868) represented a happier return to the natural history class, in a lyrical vein, influenced by his second marriage to Athénaïs Mialaret.[9]

The next year (1862) one of Michelet's more successful minor works, Satanism and Witchcraft, was published. Developed out of an episode of history, it has strong hints of Michelet's more unusual views. It was eventually adapted by animation studio Mushi Production into an animated art film, Belladonna of Sadness, directed by Eiichi Yamamoto.

This series, every volume of which combined imagination and research, was not yet finished, but the later volumes exhibit a certain falling off. The Bible de l'humanité (1864), a historical sketch of religions, was not well received. In La Montagne (1868), the last of the natural history series, the Michelet uses the staccato style, which creates short and disjointed sentences, but creates tension.

Portrait of Jules Michelet painted by Thomas Couture, c. 1865

Nos fils (1869), the last of the smaller books published during the author's life, is a tractate on education, written with knowledge and highlights Michelet's research capabilities. Some critics say it also highlights Michelet's decreasing capability to express himself. However, in a book published posthumously, Le Banquet, critics say this issue disappears. To complete the list of his miscellaneous works, two collections of pieces, written and partly published at different times, are the works Les Soldats de la révolution and Légendes démocratiques du nord.[3]

Michelet's Origines du droit français, cherchées dans les symboles et les formules du droit universel was edited by Émile Faguet in 1890 and a second edition was printed in 1900. The publication of this series of books, and the completion of his history, occupied Michelet during both decades of the empire. He lived partly in France, partly in Italy, and was accustomed to spending the winter on the Riviera, chiefly at Hyères.[3]

Histoire de France

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Photograph of Jules Michelet, late in his career

In 1867, Michelet completed his magnum opus, the Histoire de France, comprising 19 volumes. The first of these deals with early French history up to the death of Charlemagne; the second with the flourishing time of feudal France; the third with the thirteenth century; the fourth, fifth, and sixth volumes with the Hundred Years' War; the seventh and eighth with the establishment of the royal power under Charles VII and Louis XI. The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries have four volumes apiece, much of which is very distantly connected with French history proper, especially in the two volumes entitled Renaissance and Reforme. The last three volumes carry on the history of the eighteenth century to the outbreak of the Revolution.[3]

Michelet abhorred the Middle Ages and celebrated their end as a radical transformation. He attempted to clarify how a lively Renaissance could originate from an ossified medieval culture.[11][12]

Themes

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Michelet has several themes running throughout his works, which included the following three categories: maleficent, beneficent, and paired. Within each of the three themes there are subsets of ideas that occur throughout Michelet's various works. One of these themes was the idea of paired themes; for example, in many of his works he writes on grace and justice, grace being the woman or feminine, and justice being more of a masculine idea. Michelet, additionally, used union and unity in his discussions about national history, and natural history. In terms of the maleficent themes, there were subcategories these were: themes of the dry, which included concepts such as: the machine, the Jesuits, scribes, the electric, irony (Goethe), the Scholastics, public safety, and fatalism (Hobbes, Molinos, Spinoza, Hegel). Themes of the empty and the turgid included the Middle Ages, the imitation, tedium, the novel, narcotics, Alexander, and plethoric (engorged blood). Michelet also touches on themes of the indeterminate such as the Honnete-Hommes, Conde', Chantilly Sade, gambling, phantasmagoria, Italian comedy, white blood, and sealed blood.[13]

Martial dualism is a prominent theme for him, with a "war of man against nature, spirit against matter, liberty against fatality. History is nothing other than the record of this interminable struggle."[14] Leading some to describe him as a "Manichaean dualist."[15] His framing of history as a struggle between Christian spirit and liberty against Jewish matter, fatality, and tyranny, is seen by intellectual historian David Nirenberg as an example of anti-judaism as a constituent conceptual tool in western thought.[16]

Academic reception

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Michelet was perhaps the first historian to devote himself to anything resembling a picturesque history of the Middle Ages and his account is still one of the most vivid that exists. His inquiry into manuscript and printed authorities was most laborious, but his lively imagination, and his strong religious and political prejudices, made him regard all things from a singularly personal point of view.[3] There is an unevenness of treatment of historical incidents. However, Michelet's insistence that history should concentrate on "the people, and not only its leaders or its institutions"[17] clearly drew inspiration from the French Revolution. Michelet was one of the first historians to apply these liberal principles to historical scholarship.

Political life

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Uncompromisingly hostile as Michelet was to the empire, its downfall in 1870 in the midst of France's defeat by Prussia followed by the rise and fall of the Paris Commune the next year once more stimulated him to activity. Not only did he write letters and pamphlets during the struggle, but when it was over he was determined to complete the vast task that his two great histories had almost covered by a Histoire du XIXe siècle. He did not, however, live to carry it farther than the Battle of Waterloo, and the best criticism of it is perhaps contained in the opening words of the introduction to the last volume—"l'âge me presse" ("age hurries me").

The new republic was not altogether a restoration for Michelet, and his professorship at the Collège de France, of which he always contended he had been unjustly deprived, was not given back to him.[3] He was also a supporter of the Romanian National Awakening movements.

Marriages

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As a young man, Michelet married Pauline Rousseau in 1824. She died in 1839. Michelet married his second wife, Athénaïs Michelet in 1849. His second wife had been a teacher in St. Petersburg and was an author in the field of natural history and memoirs. She had opened a correspondence with him arising from her ardent admiration of his ideas that ensued for years. They became engaged before they had seen each other. After their marriage, she collaborated with him in his labors albeit without formal credit, introduced him to natural history, inspired him on themes, and was preparing a new work, La nature, at the time of his death in 1874.[18] She lived until 1899.

Death and burials

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Upon his death from a heart attack at Hyères on 9 February 1874, Michelet was interred there. At his widow's request, a Paris court granted permission for his body to be exhumed on 13 May 1876 so he could be buried in Paris.

On 16 May, his coffin arrived for reburial at Le Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris. Michelet's monument there, designed by architect Jean-Louis Pascal, was erected in 1893 through public subscription.[19]

Bequeathment of literary rights

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Michelet accorded Athénaïs literary rights to his books and papers before he died, acknowledging the significant role she had in what he published during his later years.[20] After having won a court challenge to this bequeathment, Athénaïs retained the papers and publishing rights.[20] An author of memoirs, she later published several books about her husband and his family that were based on extracts and journals he had left her.

Athénaïs bequeathed that literary legacy to Gabriel Monod, a historian who founded the Revue Historique. A potentially misogynistic effort to discount the contributions of Athénaïs is noted by a historian, Bonnie Smith, who notes, "Michelet scholarship, like other historiographical debates, has taken great pains to establish the priority of the male over the female in writing history."[21]

Bibliography

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  • Michelet, Jules. The History of the French Revolution (Charles Cocks, trans., 1847) online
  • Michelet, Jules. History of the Roman Republic (William Hazlitt, trans., 1847) online
  • Michelet, Jules (1844). The History of France. Trans. by W. K. Kelly (vol. 1–2 only).
  • Michelet, Jules. On History: Introduction to World History (1831); Opening Address at the Faculty of Letters (1834); Preface to History of France (1869). Trans. Flora Kimmich, Lionel Gossman and Edward K. Kaplan. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2013.
  • History of France v 1 English translation
  • History of France v 2 English translation

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Van der Veen, Wouter. "From Michelet to Gauguin: Van Gogh's literary mind". Van Gogh Museum Journal. Retrieved 15 July 2023.
  2. ^ De Bruijn, Jan (2004). Groen van Prinsterer in Europese context. Hilversum: Verloren. p. 12.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSaintsbury, George (1911). "Michelet, Jules". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 18 (11th ed.). pp. 369–370.
  4. ^ Michelet, Jules. History of France, trans. G. H. Smith (New York: D. Appleton, 1847)
  5. ^ Wilson, Edmund (1940). To the Finland Station: A study in the writing and acting of History.
  6. ^ Murray, P. and Murray, L. (1963) The Art of the Renaissance. London: Thames & Hudson (World of Art), p. 9. ISBN 978-0-500-20008-7
  7. ^ Brotton, Jerry (2002). The Renaissance Bazaar. Oxford University Press. pp. 21–22.
  8. ^ François Furet, Revolutionary France 1770–1880 (1992), p. 571
  9. ^ a b "Jules Michelet | French Historian & Romantic Writer | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 17 August 2024. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  10. ^ Gilman, Sander L. (1996). Seeing the Insane. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. p. 214. ISBN 0-8032-7064-X.
  11. ^ Jo Tollebeek, "'Renaissance' and 'fossilization': Michelet, Burckhardt, and Huizinga," Renaissance Studies (2001) 15#3 pp 354–366.
  12. ^ Wallace K. Ferguson, The Renaissance in historical thought: five centuries of interpretation (1948)
  13. ^ Barthes, Roland. Michelet, University of California Press; First Edition 8 January 1992
  14. ^ Jules Michelet, Introduction to Universal History, quoted in Nirenberg, 2013, p.7
  15. ^ Nirenberg 2013, p. 6,7.
  16. ^ Nirenberg 2013, p. 475.
  17. ^ Stern, Fritz, ed. (1970). "HISTORY AS a NATIONAL EPIC: Michelet". The Varieties of History (2nd ed.). London: Palgrave. p. 108. doi:10.1007/978-1-349-15406-7_8. ISBN 978-1-349-15406-7.
  18. ^ Ripley, George; Dana, Charles A., eds. (1879). "Michelet, Jules" . The American Cyclopædia.
  19. ^ Kippur, Steven (1981) Jules Michelet (State U. of New York Press, Albany), pp. 222–3.
  20. ^ a b Smith, Bonnie. Historiography, Objectivity, and the Case of the Abusive Widow. History and theory 31: 22. JSTOR 2505413
  21. ^ Smith, Bonnie. Historiography, Objectivity, and the Case of the Abusive Widow. History and theory 31: 15–32. JSTOR 2505413

Further reading

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  • Roland Barthes. Michelet (1978);English translation by Richard Howard (1992).
  • Burrows, Toby. "Michelet in English". Bulletin (Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand) 16.1 (1992): 23+. online Archived 2 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine; reviews all the translations into English.
  • François Furet; Mona Ozouf (1989). A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution. Harvard UP. pp. 981–90. ISBN 9780674177284.
  • Lionel Gossman. "Jules Michelet and Romantic Historiography" in Scribner's European Writers, eds. Jacques Barzun and George Stade (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1985), vol. 5, 571–606
  • Lionel Gossman. "Michelet and Natural History: The Alibi of Nature" in Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, vol. 145 (2001), 283–333
  • Haac, Oscar A. Jules Michelet (G.K. Hall, 1982).
  • Johnson, Douglas. Michelet and the French Revolution (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990).
  • Kippur, Stephen A. Jules Michelet: A Study of Mind and Sensibility (State University of New York Press, 1981).
  • Rigney, Ann. The Rhetoric of Historical Representation: Three Narrative Histories of the French Revolution (Cambridge University Press, 2002) covers Alphonse de Lamartine, Jules Michelet and Louis Blanc.
  • Edmund Wilson. To The Finland Station (1940) (Chapter 3)
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