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See also: born at See also: Paris on the 4th of See also: August 1604
.
His See also: father practised at the Paris See also: bar, and his See also: mother was a daughter of the See also: great surgeon Ambroise See also: Pare
.
See also: Francois Hedelin was educated for his father's profession, but, after practising for some See also: time at Nemours he abandoned See also: law, took See also: holy orders, and was appointed tutor to one of See also: Richelieu's nephews, the duc de Fronsac
.
This patronage secured for him the abbey of See also: Aubignac and of Mainac
.
The See also: death of the duc de Fonsac in 1646 put an end to hopes of further preferment, and the See also: Abbe d'Aubignac retired to Nemours, occupying himself with literature till his death on the 25th of See also: July 1676
.
He took an energetic share in the See also: literary controversies of his time
.
Against Gilles See also: Menage he wrote a See also: Terence justifie (1656); he laid claim to having originated the idea of the " See also: Carte de tendee " of Mlle de See also: Scudery's Clelie; and after being a professed admirer of Corneille he turned against him because he had neglected to mention the abbe in his Discours sur le poeme dramatique
.
He was the author of four tragedies: La Cyminde (1642), La Pucelle d'See also: Orleans (1642), Zenobie (1647) and Le Martyre de Sainte
See also: Catherine (165o)
.
Zenobie was written with the intention of affording a See also: model in which the strict rules of the drama, as understood by the theorists, were observed
.
In the choice of subjects for his plays, he seems to have been guided by a See also: desire to illustrate the various kinds of tragedy—patriotic, See also: antique and religious
.
The dramatic authors whom he was in the habit of criticizing were not slow to take See also: advantage of the opportunity for See also: retaliation offered by the production of these mediocre plays
.
It is as a theorist that D'Aubignac still arrests See also: attention
.
It has been proved that to See also: Jean See also: Chapelain belongs the See also: credit of having been the first to
establish as a See also: practical law the See also: convention of the unities that plays so large a See also: part in the See also: history of the French stage; but the See also: laws of dramatic method and construction generally were codified by d'Aubignac in his Pratique du thedtre
.
The See also: book was only published in 1657, but had been begun at the desire of Richelieu as early as 1640
.
His Conjectures academiques sur l'Iliade d'Homere, which was not published until nearly See also: forty years after his death, threw doubts on the existence of See also: Homer, and anticipa ted in some sense the conclusions of See also: Friedrich August See also: Wolf in his Prolegomena ad Homerum (1795)
.
The contents of the Pratique du thedtre are summarized by F
.
Brunetiere in his See also: notice of Aubignac in the Grande Encyclopidie
.
See also G
.
Saintsbury, Hist. of See also: Criticism, bk. v., and H
.
Rigault, Hist. de la querelle See also: des anciens et modernes
.
(1859)
.
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