From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Guillaume Thomas François Raynal (April 12,
1711 – March 6, 1796) was a French writer and man of letters
during the Age of Enlightenment.
He was born at Lapanouse in Rouergue. He was educated at the Jesuit school
of Pézenas, and
received priest's orders, but he was dismissed for unexplained
reasons from the parish of Saint-Sulpice, Paris, to which he was attached, and
thenceforward he devoted himself to society and literature. The
Abbé Raynal wrote for the Mercure de France, and compiled
a series of popular but superficial works, which he published and
sold himself. These - L'Histoire du stathoudérat (The
Hague, 1748), L'Histoire du parlement d'Angleterre
(London, 1748), Anecdotes historiques (Amsterdam, 3 vols.,
1753) - gained for him access to the salons of Mme. Geoffrin, Helvétius, and the Baron
d'Holbach.
He had the assistance of various members of the philosophe
côteries in his most important work, L'Histoire
philosophique et politique des établissements et du commerce des
Européens dans les deux Indes (Amsterdam, 4 vols., 1770). Diderot indeed is
credited with a third of this work, which was characterized by Voltaire as "du réchauffé
avec de la declamation." The other chief collaborators were
Pechméja, Holbach, Paulze, the farmer-general of taxes, the Abbé
Martin, and Alexandre Deleyre. To this piecemeal method of
composition, in which narrative alternated with tirades on
political and social questions, was added the further disadvantage
of the lack of exact information, which, owing to the dearth of
documents, could only have been gained by personal
investigation.
The "philosophic" declamations perhaps constituted its chief
interest for the general public, and its significance as a
contribution to democratic propaganda. The Histoire went
through many editions, being revised and augmented from time to
time by Raynal; it was translated into the principal European
languages, and appeared in various abridgments. Its introduction
into France was forbidden in 1779; the book was burned by the
public executioner, and an order was given for the arrest of the
author, whose name had not appeared in the first edition, but was
printed on the title page of the Geneva edition of 1780. Raynal escaped to Spa, and thence to Berlin, where he was coolly
received by Frederick the
Great, in spite of his connection with the philosophe
party.
At St. Petersburg he met with a more cordial
reception from Catherine II, and in 1787 he was
permitted to return to France, though not to Paris. He showed
generosity in assigning a considerable income to be divided
annually among the peasant proprietors of upper Guienne. He was
elected by Marseilles to the States-general, but refused to sit on
the score of age. Raynal now realized the impossibility of a
peaceful revolution, and, in terror of the proceedings for which
the writings of himself and his friends had prepared the way, he
sent to the Constituent Assembly an address, which was read on May
31, 1791, deprecating the violence of its reforms.
This address is said by Sainte-Beuve
(Nouveaux lundis, xi.) to have been composed chiefly by
Clermont Tonnerre and Pierre V. Malouet, and it
was regarded, even by moderate men, as ill-timed. The published
Lettre de l'abbé Raynal a l'Assemblee nationale (December
10, 1790) was really the work of the comte de
Guibert. During the Terror Raynal lived in retirement at
Passy and at Montlhery. On the establishment of the
Directory in 1795 he became a member of the newly organized
Institute of France. He died in the next year on the 6th of March
at Chaillot.
Bibliography
A detailed bibliography of his works and of those falsely
attributed to him will be found in Quérard's La France
littéraire, and the same author's Supercheries
dévoilées. The biography by A Jay, prefixed to Peuchet's
edition (Paris, 10 vols, 1820-1821) of the Histoire ... des
Indes, is of small value. To this edition Peuchet added two
supplementary volumes on colonial development from 1785 to 1824.
See also the anonymous Raynal démasqué (1791); Cherhal
Montreal, Éloge ... de G. T. Raynal (an. IV.); a notice in
the Moniteur (5 vendémiaire, an. V.); B Lunet,
Biographie de l'abbé Raynal (Rodez, 1866); and J Morley,
Diderot (1891).
- A. Jay, Précis historique sur la vie et les ouvrages de
l'abbé Raynal, Paris, 1820 ;
- A. Feugère, Un Précurseur de la Révolution. L'Abbé Raynal
(1713-1796), Angoulême, 1922 ;
- Raynal, de la polémique à l’histoire, G. Bancarel, G.
Goggi ed. Oxford, SVEC, 2000 ;
- G. Bancarel, Raynal ou le devoir de vérité, Genève
Champion, 2004.
Ashgate plans to publish a translation of Raynal's selected
writings in 2006.
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia
Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in
the public
domain. The article is available here.