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BARTHELEMY PROSPER ENFANTIN (1796—1864)

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Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 403 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BARTHELEMY PROSPER ENFANTIN (1796—1864)  , French social reformer, one of the founders of Saint-Simonism, was born at Paris on the 8th of
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February 1996 . He was the son of a banker of Daunhiny, and after receiving his early
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education at alyceum, was sent in 1813 to the 1cole Polytechnique . In March 1814 he was one of the
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band of students who, on the heights of Montmartre and Saint-Chaumont, attempted resistance to the armies of the allies then engaged in the investment of Paris . In consequence of this outbreak of patriotic
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enthusiasm, the school was soon after closed by Louis XVIII., and the young student was compelled to seek some other career instead of that of the soldier . He first engaged himself to a country wine merchant, for whom he travelled in Germany, Russia and the
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Netherlands . In 1821 he entered a banking-house newly established at St
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Petersburg, but returned two years later to Paris, where he was appointed
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cashier to the Caisse Hypothecaire . At the same time he became a member of the secret society of the Carbonari . In 1825 a new turn was given to his thoughts and his
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life by the friendship which he formed with Olinde Rodriguez, who introduced him to Saint-Simon . He embraced the new doctrines with ardour, and by 1829 had become one of the acknowledged heads of the
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sect (see SAINT-SIMON) . After the Revolution of 1830 Enfantin resigned his office of cashier, and devoted himself wholly to his cause . Besides contributing to the Globe newspaper, he made appeals to the
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people by systematic preaching, and organized centres of
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action in some of the
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principal cities of France . The headquarters in Paris were removed from the modest rooms in the Rue Taranne, and established in large halls near the Boulevard Italien .

Enfantin and

Bazard (q.v.) were proclaimed " Peres Supremes." This union of the supreme fathers, however, was only nominal . A divergence was already manifest, which rapidly increased to serious difference and dissension . Bazard had devoted himself to
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political reform, Enfantin to social and moral change; Bazard was organizer and governor, Enfantin was teacher and consoler; the former attracted reverence, the latter love . A hopeless antagonism arose between them, which was widened by Enfantin's announcement of his theory of the relation of man and woman, which would substitute for the " tyranny of
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marriage " a
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system of "
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free love." Bazard now separated from his colleague; and in his withdrawal was followed by all those whose chief aim was philosophical and political . Enfantin thus became
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sole "
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father," and the few who were chiefly attracted by his religious pretensions and aims still adhered to him . New converts joined them, and Enfantin assumed that his followers in France numbered 40,000 . He wore on his breast a badge with his title of " Pere," was spoken of by his preachers as " the living law," declared, and probably believed, himself to be the chosen of
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God, and sent out emissaries in a quest of a woman predestined to be the "
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female Messiah," and the
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mother of a new Saviour . The quest was very costly and altogether fruitless . No such woman was discoverable . Meanwhile believers in Enfantin and his new religion were multiplying in all parts of
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Europe . His extravagances and success at length brought down upon him the hand of the law . Public morality was in peril, and in May 183 2 the halls of the new sect were closed by the government, and the father, with some of his followers, appeared before the tribunals .

He now retired to his

estate at Menilmontant, near Paris, where with
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forty disciples, all of them men, he continued to carry out his socialistic views . In August of the same
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year he was again arrested, and on his appearance in court he desired his defence to be undertaken by two
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women who were with him, alleging that the
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matter was of
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special concern to women . This was of course refused . The trial occupied two days and resulted in a verdict of guilty, and a sentence of imprisonment for a year with a small
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fine . This
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prosecution finally discredited the new society . Enfantin was released in a few months, and then, accompanied by some of his followers, he went to
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Egypt . He stayed there two years, and might have entered the service of the viceroy if he would have professed himself, as a few of his friends did, a
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Mahommedan . On his return to France, a sadder and practically a wiser man, he settled down to very prosaic
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work . He became first a postmaster near Lyons, and in 1841 was appointed, through the influence of some of his friends who had risen to posts of power, member of a scientific commission on Algeria, which led him to engage in researches concerning North Africa and colonization in general . in 1845 he was appointed a director of the Paris &Lyons railway . Three years later he established, in conjunction with Duveyrier, a daily journal, entitled Le Credit, which was discontinued in 185o . He was afterwards attached to the administration of the railway from Lyons to the Mediterranean .

Father Enfantin held fast by his ideal to the end, but he had renounced the

hope of giving it a
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local habitation and a name in the degenerate obstinate
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world . His
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personal influence over those who associated with him was immense . " He was a man of a noble presence, with finely formed and expressive features . He was gentle and insinuating in manner, and possessed a
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calm, graceful and winning delivery " (Gent . Mag.,
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Jan . 1865) . His evident sincerity, his genuine enthusiasm, gave him his marvellous ascendancy . Not a few of his disciples ranked afterwards amongst the most distinguished men of France . He died suddenly at Paris on the 1st of September 1864 . Amongst his
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works are—Doctrine de Saint-Simon (written in
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con-junction with several of his followers), published in 183o, and several times republished; Economic politique et politique Saint-Simonienne (1831) ; Correspondance politique (1835–1840) ; Corresp. philos. et religieuse (1843–1845) ; and La
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Vie eternelle passee, presente, future (1861) . A large number of articles by his hand appeared in Le Producteur, L'Organisateur, Le Globe, and other
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periodicals . He also wrote in 1832 Le Livre nouveau, intended as a substitute for the Christian Scriptures, but it was not published .

See G . Weill, L'Ecole Saint-Simonienne, son histoire, son influence, jusqu' a nos jours (Paris, 1896) .

End of Article: BARTHELEMY PROSPER ENFANTIN (1796—1864)
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