Henri-Joseph Dulaurens
(Redirected from Henri Joseph Du Laurens)
Henri Joseph Du Laurens (sometimes Laurens or Dulaurens, original name Henri Joseph Laurent, 1719–1793 or 1797) was a French unfrocked Trinitarian friar, satirical poet and novelist,[1] born at Douai, the son of the regimental surgeon Jean Joseph Laurent and his wife Marie Josephe Menon.[2] He was author of such libertine works as Le compère Matthieu,[3] Imirce, ou la fille de la nature and L'Arrétin moderne. He may also have written Candide, Part II. He died at Mariembourg in the French First Republic, now in Belgium.[4]
External links
- Works by or about Henri-Joseph Dulaurens at Internet Archive
- Du Laur (in French)
References
- ^ Oxford Reference Retrieved 18 October 2017.
- ^ Certificate of birth and baptism (in French) Retrieved 18 October 2017.
- ^ David Coward: "Explanatory Notes" in: Denis Diderot: Jacques the Fatalist, Oxford World's Classics series (Oxford, UK: OUP), 1999, p. 257.
- ^ Bartleby Retrieved 18 October 2017.
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- 1719 births
- 1797 deaths
- People from Douai
- Writers from Nord (French department)
- 18th-century French novelists
- French male novelists
- Trinitarians
- 18th-century French male writers
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