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JOSEPH FRANCOIS MICHAUD (1767–1839)

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Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 361 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOSEPH FRANCOIS MICHAUD (1767–1839)  , French historian and publicist, was born of an old
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family on the 19th of
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June 1767, at Athens, Savoy, was educated at Bourg-en-
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Bresse, and afterwards engaged in
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literary
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work at Lyons, where the events of 1789 first called out the strong dislike to revolutionary principles which manifested itself throughout the rest of his
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life . In 1791 he went to Paris, where, not without danger, he took
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part in editing several royalist
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journals . In 1796 he became editor of La Quotidienne, for his connexion with which he was arrested after the 13th of Vendemiaire; he succeeded in escaping his captors, but was sentenced to
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death par contumace by the military council . Having resumed the editorship of his newspaper on the establishment of the
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Directory, he was again proscribed on the 18th of Fructidor, but at the close of two years returned to Paris when the consulate had superseded the Directory . His Bourbon sympathies led to a brief imprisonment in 'Soo, and on his release he for the time abandoned journalism, and began to write or edit books . Along with his
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brother and two colleagues he published in ,8o6 a Biographic moderne, ou dictionnaire
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des hommes qui se sont fait un nom en
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Europe depuis 1789, the earliest work of its kind; and in 1811 appeared the first
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volume of his Histoire des croisades and also the first volume of his Biographic universelle . In 1814 he resumed the editorship of La Quotidienne, and in the same
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year was elected Academician . In 1815 his brochure entitled Histoire des quinze semaines ou le dernier regne de
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Bonaparte met with extraordinary success, passing through twenty-seven
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editions within a very short time . His
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political services were now rewarded with the
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cross of an officer in the Legion of Honour and the modest
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post of king's reader, of which last he was deprived in 1827 for having opposed Peyronnet's Loi d' Amour " against the freedom of the Press . In 183o–1831 he travelled in
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Syria and
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Egypt for the purpose of
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collecting additional materials for the Histoire des croisades; his correspondence with a
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fellow explorer, J . J . F .

Poujoulat, consisting practically of discussions and elucidations of various points in that work, was afterwards published (Correspondence d'orient, 7 vols., 1833–1835) . Like the Histoire, it is more interesting than exact . The Bibliotheque des croisades, in four volumes more, contained the " Pieces justificatives " of the Histoire .

Michaud died on the 3oth of September 1839, at Passy, where his home had been since 1832 . His Histoire des croisades was published in its final form in six volumes in 184o under the editorship of his friend Poujoulat (9th ed., with appendix, by Huillard-Breholles, 1856) . Michaud, along with Poujoulat, also edited Nouvelle collection des memoires pour servir a l'histoire de France (32 vols., 1836–1844) . See Sainte-Beuve, Causeries du lundi, vol. vii .

End of Article: JOSEPH FRANCOIS MICHAUD (1767–1839)
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