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François Eudes de Mézeray (1610 – July 10,
1683), was a French historian.
He was born at Rye near Argentan, where
his father was a surgeon. He had two brothers, one of whom, Jean-Eudes, was the founder of the order of
the Eudists. François
studied at the University of
Caen, and completed his education at the College of Ste Barbe at Paris. His Histoire de France depuis Faramond
jusqu'au règne de Louis le juste (3 vols., 1643-1651), is a
fairly accurate summary of French and Latin chronicles.
Mézeray was appointed to a committee that supervised the La Gazette. [1]
Mézeray won the favor of Pierre Séguier and was given the title
"Historiographer to the King of France". [1]
In 1649, on the death of Vincent Voiture, was admitted to the Académie Française. His Abrégé
chronologique (3 vols., 1667-1668) went through fifteen
editions between 1668 and 1717; and he used it to attack the
financiers, with the result that his salary as historiographer was
diminished by Colbert.
Mézeray succeeded Valentin Conrart as permanent
secretary to the Académie Française (1675), and died at Paris. He
translated Grotius's Traité de la religion
chretienne (1640), and a Histoire des Turcs depuis 1612
jusqu'en 1649 (1650), which is an addition to a continuation
of Demetrius Chalcondyles.
References
- ^ a
b
Harcourt Brown (1972). "History and
the Learned Journal". Journal of the History of Ideas
33 (3): 365–378. doi:10.2307/2709041.