From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Antoine de Saint Exupéry[1]
(French pronunciation: [ɑ̃twan də
sɛ̃tɛɡzypeˈʀi]) (29 June 1900—31 July 1944) was a French writer and aviator. He is best remembered for his novella The Little
Prince (Le Petit
Prince), and for his books about aviation adventures,
including Night
Flight and Wind, Sand and Stars.
He was a successful commercial pilot before World War II, joining
the Armée de l'Air (French Air Force) on
the outbreak of war, flying reconnaissance missions until the armistice with Germany. Following a spell
of writing in the United States, he joined the Free French
Forces. He disappeared on a reconnaissance flight over the
Mediterranean in July 1944.
Early
years
Antoine Jean-Baptiste Marie Roger de Saint
Exupéry[2] was
born in Lyon to an old family of
provincial nobility, the third of five children of Marie de
Fonscolombe and Viscount Jean de Saint-Exupéry, an insurance broker
who died before his son was even four.
After failing his final exams at preparatory school, Saint
Exupéry entered the École des Beaux-Arts to study architecture. In
1921, he began his military service with the 2nd Regiment of Chasseurs (light cavalry), and was then sent to
Strasbourg for
training as a pilot. The
following year, he obtained his license and was offered transfer to
the air force. Bowing to the objections of the family of his
fiancée—the future novelist Louise Leveque de
Vilmorin—he instead settled in Paris and took an office job. The couple
ultimately broke off the engagement, however, and he worked at
several jobs over the next few years without success.
By 1926, Saint Exupéry was flying again. He became one of the
pioneers of international postal flight, in the days when aircraft
had few instruments. Later he complained that those who flew the
more advanced aircraft had become more like accountants than
pilots. He worked on the Aéropostale between Toulouse and Dakar, and became the airline stopover manager in
Cape Juby airfield, in
the Spanish zone of South Morocco, inside the Sahara desert. In 1929, Saint Exupéry moved to
Argentina, where he was
appointed director of the Aeroposta Argentina Company. This
period of his life is briefly explored in Wings of
Courage, an IMAX film by
French director Jean-Jacques Annaud.
Writing
career
Saint Exupéry's first story, "L'Aviateur" ("The Aviator"), was
published in the magazine
Le Navire d'Argent. In 1929, he published his first book,
Courrier Sud (Southern Mail); his career as
aviator was also burgeoning, and that same year he flew the Casablanca/Dakar route.
Historical marker on the home where Saint Exupéry lived in
Quebec.
In 1931, Vol de Nuit (Night Flight) —the
first of his major works and winner of the Prix Femina—was published and made his
name. It covers his experiences with the Aéropostale. That same
year, at Grasse, Saint Exupéry
married Consuelo Suncin (née Suncín
Sandoval), a widowed Salvadoran writer and artist. It would be
a stormy union, as Saint Exupéry traveled frequently and indulged
in numerous affairs, most notably with the Frenchwoman Hélène
(Nelly) de Vogüé. De Vogüé became Saint Exupéry's literary
executrix after his death, and also wrote a Saint Exupéry biography
under the pseudonym Pierre Chevrier.
Desert
crash
On 30 December 1935 at 14:45 after a flight of 19 hours and 38
minutes Saint Exupéry, along with his navigator, André Prévot,
crashed in the Libyan Sahara desert en
route to Saigon. Their plane was a Caudron C-630
Simoun n°7042 (serial F-ANRY). The crash site may be the Wadi
Natrun. The team was attempting to fly from Paris to Saigon faster
than any previous aviators, for a prize of 150,000 francs. Both survived the landing, but were faced
with the prospect of rapid dehydration in the Sahara. They had no
idea of their location. According to his memoir, Wind,
Sand and Stars, their sole supplies were grapes, two
oranges, and a small ration of wine. What Saint Exupéry himself
told the press shortly after rescue was that the men only had a
thermos of sweet coffee, chocolate, and a handful of crackers,[3] enough
to sustain them for one day. They experienced visual and auditory
hallucinations; by day three, they were so dehydrated they ceased
to sweat. Finally, on day four, a Bedouin on a camel discovered them, saving
Saint Exupéry and Prévot's lives. Saint Exupéry's fable The Little
Prince, which begins with a pilot being marooned in the
desert, is in part a reference to this experience.
American sojourn and
The Little Prince
Saint Exupéry continued to write and fly until the beginning of
World War II.
During the war, he initially flew a Bloch MB.170 with the GR II/33
reconnaissance squadron of the Armée de l'Air.
After France's 1940 armistice with Germany, he traveled to the
United States. The Saint Exupérys lived in a penthouse apartment at
240 Central Park South[4] in New York City and a
rented mansion (The Bevin House) in Asharoken[5] on Long Island's north shore between January
1941 and April 1943, and also in Quebec City in Canada for a time in
1942.[6][7] He
wrote The Little Prince in Asharoken in mid-to-late 1942;
the manuscript was completed by October.[8]
Disappearance
Following his nearly twenty-five months in North America,
Saint Exupéry returned to Europe to fly with the Free French
Forces and fight with the Allies in a Mediterranean-based
squadron. Then 43, he was older than most men assigned such duties;
he also suffered pain, due to his many fractures. He was assigned
with a number of other pilots to P-38 Lightnings, which an officer
described as "war-weary, non-airworthy craft."[9] After
wrecking a P-38 through engine failure on his second mission, he
was grounded for eight months, but was then reinstated to flight
duty on the personal intervention of General Eisenhower.
Saint Exupéry's final assignment was to collect intelligence on
German troop movements in and around the Rhone Valley preceding the Allied invasion
of southern France. On the evening of 31 July 1944, he left
from an airbase on Corsica,
and was never seen again. A woman reported having watched a plane
crash around noon of August the first near the Bay of Carqueiranne
off Toulon. An unidentifiable
body wearing French colors was found several days later and buried
in Carqueiranne
that September.
Bracelet of Saint-Exupéry found in 1998.
Discovery at
sea
In 1998, a fisherman named Jean-Claude Bianco found a silver
identity bracelet bearing the names of Saint Exupéry and his wife
Consuelo[10]
and his publishers, Reynal & Hitchcock, hooked to a piece of
fabric, presumably from his flight suit.
In 2000, a diver named Luc Vanrell found a P-38 Lightning
crashed in the seabed off the coast of Marseille. The remains of
the aircraft were recovered in October 2003.[10]
On 7 April 2004, investigators from the French Underwater
Archaeological Department confirmed that the plane was, indeed,
Saint Exupéry's F-5B reconnaissance variant. No marks or holes
attributable to gunfire were found, however this was not considered
significant as only a small portion of the aircraft was
recovered.[11] In
June 2004, the fragments were given to the Museum of Air and Space
in Le Bourget.[12]
The location of the crash site and the bracelet are less than
80 km by sea from where the unidentified French soldier was
found in Carqueiranne, and it remains plausible,
but has not been confirmed, that the body was carried there by
ocean currents after the crash over the course of several days.
Speculations in March
2008
In March 2008, a former Luftwaffe pilot, 85-year-old Horst Rippert
(the brother of the singer Ivan Rebroff), told La Provence,
a Marseille newspaper, that he engaged and downed a P-38 Lightning
on 31 July 1944 in the area where Saint Exupéry's plane was
found.[12][13][14]
According to Rippert, he was on a reconnaissance mission over the
Mediterranean sea when he saw a P-38 with a French emblem behind
him near Toulon.[15]
Rippert says he opened fire at the P-38, which crashed into the
sea.
After the war, Horst Rippert became a television journalist and
led the ZDF sports department.
Rippert says he came to believe that he had probably shot down
Saint Exupéry, a writer Rippert knew of because he had read his
books during his youth — and also says Saint Exupéry was one
of his favorite authors.[15][16]
Rippert has written a forthcoming book discussing the alleged Saint
Exupéry shootdown.[15]
The story is unverifiable, and has met with criticism from some
German and French investigators.[17][18]
Contemporary archival sources, including intercepted Luftwaffe
signals, strongly suggest[19] that
Saint-Exupéry was not shot down by a German aircraft. An American
Lightning was shot down on 30 July by Feldwebel Guth of
3./Jagdgruppe 200, the unit in which Rippert was serving. Guth’s
victory claim is recorded in the lists held by the German
Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv. The progress of the interception was
followed by Allied radar and radio monitoring stations and
documented in Missing Air Crew Report 7339 on the loss of Second
Lieutenant Gene C. Meredith of the 23rd Photographic Squadron. The
Mediterranean Allied Air Forces Signals Intelligence Report for 30
July records that "an Allied reconnaissance aircraft was claimed
shot down at 1115 [GMT]".
By contrast, there is no claim on file from Rippert for a
Lightning on 31 July and the RAF’s No. 276 Wing (Signals
Intelligence) Operations Record Book notes only: "... three enemy
fighter sections between 0758/0929 hours operating in reaction to
Allied fighters over Cannes, Toulon and the area to the North. No
contacts. Patrol activity north of Toulon reported between
1410/1425 hours".[20]
Honours
Commemoration plaque in the Parisian
Panthéon.
Saint Exupéry on a 50 franc note
- Saint Exupéry is commemorated by a plaque in the Parisian Panthéon.
- Until the euro was introduced
in 2002, his image and his drawing of the Little Prince appeared on
France's 50-franc note.
- In 2000, the Lyon Satolas Airport was renamed Lyon-Saint Exupéry Airport
in his honour.
- There is a monument for him in Tarfaya, Morocco.
- Asteroid 2578 Saint-Exupéry
Literary
works
While not precisely autobiographical, much of Saint Exupéry's
work is inspired by his experiences as a pilot. One exception is
The
Little Prince, a poetic self-illustrated tale in which a pilot
stranded in the desert meets a young prince from a tiny asteroid. The Little
Prince is a philosophical story, including societal
criticism and remarking on the strangeness of the adult world.
- L'Aviateur (1926)
- Courrier Sud (1929) (translated into English as
Southern Mail)
- Vol de Nuit (1931) (Night
Flight)
- Terre des Hommes (1939) (Wind,
Sand and Stars) - Grand Prix du
roman de l'Académie française
- Pilote de Guerre (1942) (Flight to
Arras)
- Le Petit Prince (1943) (The Little
Prince)
- Lettre à un Otage (1944) (Letter to a
Hostage)
- Citadelle (1948) (The Wisdom of the Sands),
posthumous, ISBN 9780226733722
- Lettres de jeunesse (1953), posthumous
- Carnets (1953), posthumous
- Lettres à sa mère (1955), posthumous
- Écrits de guerre (1982), posthumous
- Manon, danseuse (2007), posthumous
- Lettres à l'inconnue (2008), posthumous
Popular
culture
Literature
- After his disappearance, Consuelo de Saint Exupéry
wrote The Tale of the Rose, which was published in
2000.
- Saint Exupéry is mentioned in Tom Wolfe's The
Right Stuff: "A saint in short, true to his name, flying
up here at the right hand of God. The good Saint-Ex! And he was not
the only one. He was merely the one who put it into words most
beautifully and anointed himself before the altar of the right
stuff."
- In 2000, Jean-Pierre de Villers wrote a novella telling the
imagined story of Saint Exupéry's last flight, The Last Flight
of the Little Prince.[21]
- Comic-book author Hugo
Pratt imagined the fantastic story of Saint Exupéry's last
flight in Saint Exupéry : le dernier vol (1994).
- His 1939 book Terre des hommes was the inspiration for
the theme of Expo 67 in Montreal, also translated
into English as "Man and His World".
- Saint Exupéry is the hero of Alma, a protagonist in Nicole Krauss'
novel The History of Love.
- From The
Moviegoer by Walker Percy: "Tolstoy and Saint-Exupéry
were right about war, etc."
- Jimmy
Buffett's 1992 novel Where Is Joe Merchant?
opens with a passage from Saint Exupéry's Wind,
Sand and Stars.
- Saint Exupéry is mentioned in Rinker Buck's 1997 memoir
Flight of Passage: "During that climb, I thought a lot
about Saint-Ex and Ernest Gann again. Nothing in particular in
their writings came back to me, and in any case I was too dulled by
the throbbing engine and airframe to recall their books clearly. I
just thought of Saint-Ex and Gann, the men. They were always
scaring the hell out of themselves in airplanes, then coming back
down and transforming the experience into metaphysical poetry." pg.
226
Film
Music
The album Tick Tock by Norwegian band Gazpacho is
based on Exupéry's memoir Wind, Sand and Stars.
Regina Spektor's 'Baobabs' is based of Exupery's memoir.
Art
In "Wind, Sand and Stars" Saint Exupery bequeathed humankind a
mantra. "In anything at all, perfection is finally attained not
when there is no longer anything to add, but when there is no
longer anything to take away."
Notes
- ^
All his books were published under the name with a hyphen which
makes it his pseudonym.
Memorial plaques and the 50-Franc banknote also show the
hyphen.
- ^
According to French legal documents and his birth certificate, no
hyphen is used in his name, thus written de Saint
Exupéry, not Saint-Exupéry. The Armorial de
l'ANF, which lists the French nobility, mentions the
Saint Exupéry (de) family without a hyphen.
- ^
Schiff, Stacy. Saint-Exupéry: A Biography. New York: 1994,
A.A. Knopf. p. 258
- ^
In the Footsteps of
Saint-Exupery by Jennifer Dunning, New York Times, May 12,
1989.
- ^
Cotsalas, Valerie (2000-09-10). "The Little Prince: Born in
Asha0". New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E03E7D61739F933A2575AC0A9669C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all. Retrieved
2009-08-10.
- ^
Schiff, Stacy (2006). Saint-Exupéry: A
Biography. Macmillan. pp. page 379 of 529. ISBN
0805079130.
- ^
Brown, Hannibal. "The Country Where the Stones
Fly" (documentary research). Visions of a Little
Prince. http://habpro.tripod.com/visionslp/id13.html. Retrieved
2006-10-30.
- ^
Schiff, Stacy (February 7, 2006). Saint-Exupery.
Owl Books. p. 379. ISBN
978-0-8050-7913-5. http://books.google.com/books?visbn=0805079130&id=h-gk5R0OmI0C&pg=PA379&lpg=PA379&dq=%22Bevin+House%22&sig=4p8_dhvcRABg-EiedAuar4UM5PU.
- ^
Cate, Curtis, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry: His Life and
Times, Longmans Canada Limited, 1970.
- ^ a
b
Saint-Exupery committed
suicide says diver who found plane wreckage, published by the
Cyber Diver News Network, 7 August 2004.
- ^
"''Riou island's F-5B
Lightning, Rhône's delta, France. Pilot: Commander Antoine de
Saint-Exupéry''". Aero-relic.org. http://www.aero-relic.org/English/F-5B_42-68223_St_Exupery/e-00-stexuperyf5b.htm. Retrieved
2009-08-10.
- ^ a
b
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
aurait été abattu par un pilote allemand, March 15, 2008
report in Le
Monde newspaper in French.
- ^ Wartime author mystery
'solved' report shown at the BBC News site on Monday, 17
March 2008
- ^
[1] NY
Times, "Clues to the Mystery of a Writer Pilot Who
Disappeared", April 11, 2008
- ^ a
b
c
Ivan Rebroffs Bruder
schoss Saint-Exupéry ab March 15, 2008 Agence
France-Presse report in German.
- ^
German Pilot Fears He Killed
Writer St. Exupéry, 16 March 2008 Reuters news story quoting Rippert in Le Figaro newspaper.
Retrieved 16 March 2008.
- ^
Georg Bönisch, Romain Leick: "Gelassen in den Tod." Der
Spiegel, No. 13, 22. March 2008
- ^
Jürg Altweg, "Aus Erfahrung skeptisch: Französische Zweifel an
Saint-Exuperys Abschuss durch Horst Rippert", Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung, March 28, 2008, No. 32, S. 44
- ^
Nick Beale, "Saint-Ex a péry Entre mythe et réalité." on aero
JOURNAL, 2008, No. 4, pp. 78 - 81. More precise on the web-site
"Ghost Bombers"(see External links)
- ^
Archive sources for Luftwaffe activity over Southern France on 30
and 31 July 1944 are cited in an extensive article on the Ghost
Bombers aviation history website[2]
- ^
Jean-Pierre de Villers (2000-11-02). The Last Flight of the Little Prince.
Les Editions du Vermillon. ISBN 1895873835. http://www.amazon.com/dp/1895873835.
References
External
links
| Persondata |
| NAME |
Saint Exupéry, Antoine de |
| ALTERNATIVE
NAMES |
|
| SHORT
DESCRIPTION |
French writer |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
19 June 1900 |
| PLACE OF
BIRTH |
Lyon, France |
| DATE OF DEATH |
31 July 1944 |
| PLACE OF
DEATH |
Off the coast of Marseille, France |