Amans-Alexis Monteil  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

(Redirected from Monteil)
Jump to: navigation, search

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

Amans-Alexis Monteil (7 June 1769 - 20 February 1850), French historian, was born at Rodez, and died at Cely (Seine-et-Marne).

His tastes were historical, and he taught history at Rodez, at Fontainebleau and at St Cyr. He held that a disproportionate importance had been given to kings, their ministers and generals, and that it was necessary rather to study the people. In his Histoire des français des divers etas, ou histoire de France aux cinq derniers siècles (10 vols, 1828-1844) he undertook to describe the different classes and occupations of the community. For this he made a collection of manuscripts, which he sold in 1835 (many of them passed into the library of Sir Thomas Philipps), drawing up a catalogue under the singular title of Traité de materiaux manuscrits de divers genres d'histoire.

He boasted of having been the first to write really "national" history, and he wished further to show this in a memoir entitled L'Influence de l'histoire des divers etats, ou comment fill allée la France si elle est eu cette histoire. (1840; reprinted in 1841 under the title: Les Français pour la premiere fois dans l'histoire de France, ou poetique de l'histoire des divers etats).

Monteil did not invent the history of civilization, but he was one of the first in France, and perhaps in Europe, to point out its extreme importance. He revised the third edition of his history himself (5 vols, 1848); a fourth appeared after his death with a preface by Jules Janin (5 vols, 1853).

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Amans-Alexis Monteil" 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.

Personal tools