Misplaced Pages

Louise de Courville: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 10:41, 23 December 2024 editJASpencer (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers82,672 editsm Biography← Previous edit Revision as of 10:42, 23 December 2024 edit undoJASpencer (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers82,672 edits removed Category:French countesses; added Category:French countesses by marriage using HotCatNext edit →
Line 37: Line 37:


] ]
] ]
] ]
] ]

Revision as of 10:42, 23 December 2024

Louise de Courville
BornLouise Anne Marie Rondel
August 25, 1860
Avignon, France
DiedFebruary 23, 1937
7th arrondissement of Paris, France

Louise de Courville, born Louise Rondel in Avignon on August 25, 1860, and died in Paris on February 23, 1937, better known as Comtesse de Courville, was a French author of children's books and a militant of Action française.

Biography

Born into a bourgeois family, Louise Rondel was the daughter of an engineer with the Ponts et Chaussées. She was also the cousin of Auguste Rondel. In 1886, she married Count Maurice de Courville (1860–1944), a military engineer and director of the Schneider factories, responsible for manufacturing heavy artillery for the French army.

Passionate about literature, the Comtesse de Courville published several children's novels between 1896 and 1899. Concurrently, she hosted a salon at her apartment on the Rue du Cherche-Midi, where she became a close friend of Charles Maurras and Maurice Barrès. She was described as a “woman of social and networking prowess."

Alongside the Marquise de Mac Mahon, she worked to mobilize sections of royalist women and played an active role in establishing the Institut d'Action française. She was named secretary of the Royalist Ladies' Committee. Her dedication served as an inspiration for “her son Xavier and her two sons-in-law, Jean Rivain and Pierre Gilbert, who were among the leading militants of Action Française."

Works

  • 1896: Mademoiselle Edmonde
  • 1897: Les Petits de Presle
  • 1897: La Vieille
  • 1898: Amitiés d’enfants
  • 1898: Marmiton
  • 1899: En fuite
  • 1900: Histoires bretonnes ; Le Petit Ami des pauvres ; La Veuve Corr

References

  1. Act of death (with birth date and place) in Paris, no. 319, view 3/31.
  2. Courville, retrieved 2022-02-13
  3. ^ L’Action française au féminin : Réseaux et figures de militantes au début du XXe siècle, retrieved 2022-02-13
  4. Cahiers n°32, retrieved 2022-02-13
  5. Eugen Weber (1964), L'Action Française, Paris: Stock, ISBN 2-01-016210-2 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |passage= ignored (|pages= suggested) (help)
Categories: