Guilleragues, Gabriel-Joseph de Lavergne, viscount of

Guilleragues, Gabriel-Joseph de Lavergne, viscount of

▪ French author and diplomat
French in full  Gabriel-Joseph de Lavergne, vicomte de Guilleragues 
born Nov. 18, 1628, Bordeaux, France
died March 4, 1685, Constantinople, Ottoman Empire [now Istanbul, Tur.]

      French author and diplomat, considered by most modern authorities to be the author of the Lettres portugaises (1669; “Portuguese Letters”).

      Guilleragues was educated at the Collège de Navarre and subsequently remained in Paris to study law. He later returned to his place of birth, Bordeaux, to become a lawyer in the parlement (high court) there. In 1651 he met Armand I de Bourbon, prince de Conti (Conti, Armand I de Bourbon, prince de), and five years later became his steward, a post he occupied until Conti's death. Guilleragues then moved to Paris, where he frequented Mme de Sablé's salon and was on friendly terms with the writers Molière, Nicolas Boileau (Boileau, Nicolas) (who called him “the most agreeable man in France”), and La Rochefoucauld (La Rochefoucauld, François VI, Duke de). Guilleragues entered the service of King Louis XIV in 1669 as his private secretary, and 10 years later he was appointed French ambassador at Constantinople, where the scholar Antoine Galland (Galland, Antoine) served as his secretary.

      In 1669 Guilleragues published the two works that appear to constitute his entire literary oeuvre: Valentins (1668), a collection of rhymed poems, and the Lettres portugaises, a purported translation into French of five letters written by a Portuguese nun, who in the early 19th century was identified as Mariana Alcoforado (Alcoforado, Mariana). The letters, which describe the nun's feelings of betrayal after a French officer seduces and abandons her, remained widely popular from the 17th century onward. They were accepted as authentic until the 1920s, when F.C. Green claimed that Guilleragues was their probable author, although debate over their authorship continued into the 21st century.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Alcoforado, Mariana — ▪ Portuguese nun baptized April 22, 1640 , Beja, Port. died July 28, 1723, Beja       Portuguese nun, long believed to have written Lettres portugaise (1669; “Portuguese Letters”), a collection of five love letters, though most modern authorities …   Universalium

  • Portuguese literature — Introduction       the body of writing in the Portuguese language produced by the peoples of Portugal, which includes the Madeira Islands and the Azores.       The literature of Portugal is distinguished by a wealth and variety of lyric poetry,… …   Universalium

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