Gilles Ménage  

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Gilles Ménage (August 15, 1613 – July 23, 1692) was a French scholar.

He was born at Angers, the son of Guillaume Ménage, king's advocate at Angers, where Gilles was born.

A good memory and enthusiasm for learning carried him quickly through his literary and professional studies, and he practised at the bar at Angers before he was twenty. In 1632, he pleaded several causes before the parlement of Paris, but illness caused him to abandon the legal profession for the church. He became prior of Montdidier without taking holy orders, and lived for some years in the household of Cardinal de Retz (then coadjutor to the Archbishop of Paris), where he had leisure for literary pursuits.

Some time after 1648 he quarrelled with his patron and withdrew to a house in the cloister of Notre-Dame de Paris, where he gathered round him on Wednesday evenings those literary assemblies which he called "Mercuriales". Jean Chapelain, Paul Pellisson, Valentine Conrart, Jean François Sarrazin and Du Bos were among the habitués. He was tutor to Marie-Madeleine Pioche de la Vergne, comtesse de la Fayette, later the great writer, to whom he was very attached. He was admitted to the Accademia della Crusca of Florence, but his caustic sarcasm led to his exclusion from the Académie française. Ménage made many enemies and suffered under the satire of Boileau and of Molière. Molière immortalized him as the pedant Vadius in Les Femmes savantes, a portrait Ménage pretended to ignore.

In 1664 he published at London an edition of the Lives of Eminent Philosophers by Diogenes Laertius that contains an unedited anonymous life of Aristotle; this life was known as 'Vita Menagiana' before the critical edition by Ingemar Düring, Aristotle in the ancient biographical tradition Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell 1957; reprinted New York, Garland, 1987, pp. 80–93) with the title 'Vita Hesychii' (the attribution to Hesychius of Miletus is controversial).

Ménage died at Paris in 1692.

Works (partial list)

  • Poemata latina, gallica, graeca, et italica (1656)
  • Observationes et emendationes in Diogenem Laertium Paris 1663, (reprint: London 1664, Amsterdam 1692)
  • Origini della lingua italiana (1669)
  • Dictionnaire etymologique (1650 and 1670)
  • Observations sur la langue française (1672–1676)
  • Histoire de Sablé (1683)
  • Anti-Bailet (1690)
  • Historia mulierum philosopharum (1690).

English translations

  • The history of women philosophers translated from the Latin with an introduction by Beatrice H. Zedler, Lanham: University press of America (1984)

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Gilles Ménage" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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