Eugène Rambert.

Eugène Rambert (6 April 1830 – 21 November 1886), was a Swiss author and poet.

Life

He was born at Sâles near Swiss Clarens, the eldest son of a Vaudois schoolmaster, from whom he received his education. When in 1845 his father lost his post owing to the religious disputes, Rambert became a teacher in Paris, and later a tutor in England and at Geneva. When the family's fortunes improved, Rambert was able to pursue his studies for the ministry, but he was more attracted by literature, and in 1855 became professor of French literature at the academy of Lausanne, and in 1860 at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zürich, where he remained till 1881, when he again became professor at Lausanne.[1][2]

His principal work, Les Alpes suisses (5 vols., 1866–1875; republished with large additions, according to his own scheme, in 6 volumes, 1887–1889), is a mine of miscellaneous information on the subject. He also published several volumes of poetry, as well as a volume entitled Écrivains nationaux (1874, republished 1889), and biographies of the pietist Alexandre Vinet (1875),[3] of the poet Juste Olivier (1879)[4] and of the artist Alexandre Calame (1883).[5]

Rambert's Dernières Poesies were edited (1903) by Henri Warnery, whose Eugène Rambert (Lausanne, 1890) contains a critical estimate.

References

  1. Coolidge 1911.
  2. Daniel Maggetti: Eugène Rambert in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland, 2012-06-22.
  3. Eugène Rambert: Alexandre Vinet. Histoire de sa vie et de ses œuvres. 1875.
  4. Juste Olivier: Œuvres choisies. Lausanne 1879. Eugène Rambert published the collected writings posthumously including a biography of Juste Olivier.
  5. Eugène Rambert: Alexandre Calame, sa vie et son œuvre d’après les sources originales. Fischbacher, 1884.
Attribution
  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Coolidge, William Augustus Brevoort (1911). "Rambert, Eugène". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 22 (11th ed.). p. 873.
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