André-Joseph Panckoucke | |
---|---|
Born | Lille (France) | 31 January 1703
Died | 19 January 1753 49) Lille (France) | (aged
Nationality | France |
Occupation(s) | Author, printer and bookselle |
Known for | publishing Voltaire |
André-Joseph Panckoucke (31 January 1703 – 19 January 1753) was a French author and bookseller. He was the first of the Panckoucke family directly or indirectly involved in French publishing (Encyclopédie, Encyclopédie Méthodique, Le Moniteur Universel, Dalloz).
Biography
André-Joseph Panckoucke, born in Lille in France, was the son of Pierre Panckoucke and Marie Angélique Hennion.[1]
Firstly trader haberdasher,[1] he founded his bookshop on Place Rihour (fr), Lille, between 1728 and 1733.
On 12 February 1730, he married Marie-Marguerite Gandouin, the daughter of Pierre Gandouin (1672-1743), a Parisian scholar and bookseller whose bookshop was located at Quai des Grands-Augustins (fr) in Paris and named A la belle image.[2] They had 15 children.
André-Joseph published several well-known works: in 1746 the periodical L'abeille flamande (a Flemish historical review stopped after 10 issues), in 1745 La bataille de Fontenoy (Battle of Fontenoy), in 1759 L'heureux citoyen, discours à M. J.J. Rousseau.[3]
He was the father of Charles-Joseph Panckoucke and of Amélie Panckoucke, French writer and salonnière, wife of the journalist, translator and man of letters Jean-Baptiste-Antoine Suard. He was the father-in-law of the Brussels printer Jean-Louis de Boubers (fr).
He was Jansenist, opposed to the absolutism of royal power and admired Voltaire[4] with whom he corresponded for a time.[2] Died in Lille, he could not have been buried without orders from the Bishop of Tournai.[5]
His widow took over the direction of the family business and developed the publishing catalogue. In 1759, she was prosecuted for publishing Voltaire Précis de l'Ecclésiaste en vers[6] and her son Charles-Joseph Panckoucke was imprisoned for 6 months.
Selected works
- Dictionnaire géographique de la châtellenie de Lille (1723),[7]
- L'art de se désopiler la rate (1754),[8]
- L'abrégé chronologique de l'histoire de Flandre contenant les traits remarquables de l'histoire des comtes de Flandre depuis Baudouin Ier dit Bras de fer, jusqu'à Charles II, roi d'Espagne (1762),[9]
- Dictionnaire des proverbes françois et des façons de parler comiques (1748),[10]
- Etudes convenables aux demoiselles contenant la grammaire, la poésie, la réthorique (1749).[11]
References
- 1 2 (in French) Genealogy on GeneaNet
- 1 2 Frédéric Barbier (1 January 2002). Lumières du nord: imprimeurs, libraires et "gens du livre" dans le nord au XVIIIe siècle (1701-1789) : dictionnaire prosopographique. Librairie Droz. pp. 406–. ISBN 978-2-600-00683-5.
- ↑ Gaspard Guillard de Beaurieu (1759). L'heureux citoyen, discours à M. J.J. Rousseau.
- ↑ Watts, George B. (1954), "Voltaire and Charles Joseph Panckoucke", Kentucky Foreign Romance Quarterly, 1 (4): 179–197, doi:10.1080/00230332.1954.9933596
- ↑ Dictionnaire des journalistes. "Panckoucke". Institut des Sciences de l'Homme. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
- ↑ Voltaire (1759). Précis de l'Ecclésiaste, en vers. pp. 3–.
- ↑ Joseph Fr. Michaud; Louis Gabriel Michaud (1822). Biographie universelle, ancienne et moderne; ou, Histoire, par ordre alphabétique: de la vie publique et privée de tous les hommes qui se sont fait remarquer par leurs écrits, leurs actions, leurs talents, leurs vertus ou leurs crimes. Michaud frères. pp. 480–.
- ↑ L' Art de désopiler la rate. Paquinetti. 1773.
- ↑ André-Joseph Panckoucke (1762). Abrégé chronologique de l'histoire de Flandre contenant les traits remarquables de l'histoire des comtes de Flandre depuis Baudouin Ier dit Bras de fer, jusqu'à Charles II, roi d'Espagne. chez J.-L. de Boubers.
- ↑ André Joseph Panckoucke (1748). Dictionnaire des proverbes françois, et des façons de parler comiques.
- ↑ Andre Joseph Panckoucke (1749). Les études convenables aux demoiselles, contenant la grammaire, la poésie, la rhétorique, le commerce des lettres etc. Panckoucke.
External links
- (in French) Society of Friends of Panckoucke Website