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François Fertiault (25 June 1814 5 October 1915[1]) was a French novelist, poet, essayist, and writer of children's literature.

François Fertiault at the age of 100, in 1914.
François Fertiault at the age of 100, in 1914.

Biography



Early life


Fertiault was born in Verdun-sur-le-Doubs, in département Saône-et-Loire,[1] located in central eastern France. His father was a soldier who combatted under Napoléon[1] and died during the German Campaign of 1813. Thanks to the help provided by his uncle and a clerk, François Fertiault attended a school in Chalon-sur-Saône[1] since 1820, where he graduated Baccalauréat at the age of 20.


Early career


During his school years, Fertiault's literary drafts proved to be promising; Fertiault was immediately hired within the editorial board of the newspaper Patriote de Saône-et-Loire and starts working as a literary critic. Then, he settled in Paris, where he worked in the printing house Donbey-Dupré[1] from August 8, 1835. In 1836, he is hired as a secretary in a bank in Bischoffsheim,[1] in département Bas-Rhin, in north-eastern France. He worked there until the French Revolution of 1848.


Publishing


François Fertiault after married Julie Rodde,[1] supported his wife in his literary works, and published several books with her.[1]

Fertiault and his wife settled in Paris a few years later. There, they work as publishers of the periodical Feuilleton de Paris, and then of the Bulletin de Paris between 1858 and 1864. Besides his author career, Fertiault was also a literary critic until the end of his life, mainly dealing with modern and contemporary literature. Thanks to Alphonse Lemerre, Fertiault joined the Parnassianism move and collaborated to the redaction of the famous anthology Le Parnasse contemporain.[2] Fertiault also corresponded with the Norman poet Alexandre Piédagnel.[2][3]


Personal life


Fertiault's wife, Julie, was the daughter of journalist Victor Rodde (1792-1835), he had married her in 1841, and she died in 1900. Their only child died during early childhood; in 1956 Fertiault retired progressively from his literary career and died at the age of 101,[2] on October 5[1] in Paris.


Works


Novels and tales
Poems
Children and youth books
Essays

Legacy


In Verdun-sur-le-Doubs, Fertiault's natal village, a street is named "François Fertiault".[4]


References


  1. (in French) Jean-Claude Polet, Patrimoine littéraire européen : Index général, De Boeck Supérieur, 2000, 600 p. (ISBN 2804131629, read online), p. 377
  2. (in French) François Fertiault Archived 2015-07-14 at the Wayback Machine, short-edition.com
  3. (in French) Le Père Lécureux, bouquiniste : François Fertiault à Alexandre Piedagnel. Lettre et poème autographe retrouvés, le-bibliomane.blogspot.fr
  4. (in French) List of streets in Verdun-sur-le-Doubs

Bibliography





На других языках


- [en] François Fertiault

[fr] François Fertiault

François Fertiault, né le 25 juin 1814 à Verdun-sur-le-Doubs (Saône-et-Loire[1],[2]) et mort le 5 octobre 1915[1] à Paris (9e)[3], était un écrivain et poète français. Il a parfois publié ses œuvres sous le pseudonyme Altifuret Cranisof, anagramme de son nom et de son prénom[4], et a été le doyen de la Société des gens de lettres[5].



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