Louis de Sacy
Louis de Sacy (French pronunciation: [lwi də sasi]; 1654, Paris – 26 October 1727, Paris) was a French author, and lawyer. He was the third member elected to occupy seat 2 of the Académie française in 1701. De Sacy was particularly known for his elegant translations of Pliny the Younger's Epistulae and Panegyricus Traiani.[1][2]
Bibliography
- Lettres de Pline le Jeune (1699-1701)
- Traité de l’amitié (1703)
- Traité de la gloire (1715)
References
- ^ Académie française. "Louis de Sacy".Retrieved 22 March 2017 (in French).
- ^ Godefroy, Frédéric Eugène (1863). Histoire de la littérature française depuis le xvie sìcle, Vol. 3, p. 49. Gaume frères & J. Duprey (in French)
- v
- t
- e
- Valentin Conrart (1634)
- Toussaint Rose (1675)
- Louis de Sacy (1701)
- Charles de Secondat, baron de Montesquieu (1728)
- Jean-Baptiste Vivien de Châteaubrun (1755)
- François-Jean de Chastellux (1775)
- Aimar-Charles-Marie de Nicolaï (1788)
- François de Neufchâteau (1803)
- Pierre-Antoine Lebrun (1828)
- Alexandre Dumas fils (1874)
- André Theuriet (1896)
- Jean Richepin (1908)
- Émile Mâle (1927)
- François Albert-Buisson (1955)
- Marc Boegner (1962)
- René de Castries (1972)
- André Frossard (1987)
- Hector Bianciotti (1996)
- Dany Laferrière (2013)
This article about a French writer or poet is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e