Camille Jullian

Camille Jullian (15 March 1859 – 12 December 1933) was a French historian,[1] philologist, archaeologist and historian of French literature, student of Fustel de Coulanges, whose posthumously published work he helped to compile.

Biography

Jullian was born in Marseille.[1] Specialising in Gaul and the Roman epoch,[1] he was notably a student of the École Normale Supérieure, member of the École française de Rome and professor of national antiquities at the Collège de France. His major work is a multi-volume history of Gaul.

He was involved with the controversy over the archaeological findings at Glozel in France; he was among those who believed the artefacts recovered were faked.[1]

Jullian was elected member of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres in 1908 and the Académie française in 1924. He was a member of the Legion of Honour.[1]

He died in Paris in 1933. His daughter married a man of questionable background named Simounet, a war veteran who ended his life in poverty; their son, the author Philippe Jullian, took instead his grandfather's name.[2]

Works

On Bordeaux and la Gironde

  • Étude d'épigraphie bordelaise. Les Bordelais dans l'armée romaine. Notes concernant les inscriptions de Bordeaux extraites des papiers de M. de Lamontagne, 1884
  • Les antiquités de Bordeaux (Revue archéologique), 1885
  • Inscriptions romaines de Bordeaux, 1887-1890 [read the books digitized by the Cujas Library : Vol. I, Vol. II]
  • Ausone et Bordeaux. Études sur les derniers temps de la Gaule romaine, 1893 Read online
  • Histoire de Bordeaux depuis les origines jusqu'en 1895, 1895 Read online
  • L'orientalisme à Bordeaux. Bordeaux: Feret. 1897. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 10 June 2014.

Works on Gaule

  • De protectoribus et domesticis augustorum, 1883
  • Histoire des institutions politiques de l'ancienne France, de Fustel de Coulanges (posthumous edition of his works), 1890
  • Gallia, tableau sommaire de la Gaule sous la domination romaine, Hachette, 1892
  • Fréjus romain, 1886
  • Notes d'épigraphie, 1886
  • Les transformations politiques de l'Italie sous les empereurs romains, 43 av JC-330 après J.-C., 1884
  • Extraits des historiens du XIXe, publiés, annotés et précédés d'une introduction sur l'histoire de France, 1897
  • Inscriptiones Galliae narbonensis Latinae (CIL XII), en collaboration, 1899
  • Vercingétorix. Paris: Hachette. 1901. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2014.
  • La politique romaine en Provence (218-59 avant notre ère), 1901
  • Recherches sur la religion gauloise, 1903
  • Plaidoyer pour la préhistoire, 1907
  • Les anciens dieux de l'Occident, 1913
  • Les Paris des Romains. Les Arènes. Les Thermes, 1924
  • Histoire de la Gaule, rééd. Hachette, Coll. Références, 1993, 1270 pages, (ISBN 978-2010212178)
  • Au seuil de notre histoire. Leçons faites au Collège de France, 1905-1930, 3 vol. 1930-1931
  • Les invasions ibériques en Gaule et l'origine de Bordeaux. Bordeaux: Imp. G. Gounouilhou. 1903. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 10 June 2014.

Les œuvres du patriote

  • Le Rhin gaulois : le Rhin français, 1915
  • Pas de paix avec Hohenzollern. À un ami du front, 1918
  • La guerre pour la patrie, 1919
  • Aimons la France, conférences : 1914-1919, 1920
  • De la Gaule à la France. Nos origines historiques, 1922

Bibliography

References

  1. "Camille Jullian, historian, dead". New York Times. 13 December 1933. p. 23.
  2. Ian Burama, "Occupied Paris: The Sweet and the Cruel," New York Review of Books 56 (17 December 2009), online edition.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.