The Deathly Hallows OOC Site
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

Françoise-Louise de Warens

Go down

Françoise-Louise de Warens Empty Françoise-Louise de Warens

Post  taixyz1992 Sun Nov 21, 2010 3:51 pm

Not long afterward, Rousseau abandoned his taste for escapist stories in favor of the antiquity of Plutarch's Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans, which he would read to his father while he made watches.
When Rousseau was 10, his father, an avid hunter, got into a legal quarrel with a wealthy landowner on whose lands he had been caught trespassing. To avoid certain defeat in the courts, he moved away to Nyon in the territory of Bern, taking Rousseau's aunt Suzanne with him. He remarried, and from that point Jean-Jacques saw little of him.[5] Jean-Jacques was left with his maternal uncle, who packed him, along with his own son, Abraham Bernard, away to board for two years with a Calvinist minister in a hamlet outside Geneva. Here the boys picked up the elements of mathematics and drawing. Rousseau, who was always deeply moved by religious services, for a time even dreamed of becoming a Protestant minister.


Les Charmettes: the house where Jean-Jacques Rousseau lived with Mme de Warens in 1735-6. It is now a museum dedicated to Rousseau.
Virtually all our information about Rousseau's youth has come from his posthumously published Confessions, in which the chronology is somewhat confused, though recent scholars have combed the archives for confirming evidence to fill in the blanks. At age 13, Rousseau was apprenticed first to a notary and then to an engraver who beat him. At 15, he ran away from Geneva (on 14 March 1728) after returning to the city and finding the city gates locked due to the curfew. In adjoining Savoy he took shelter with a Roman Catholic priest, who introduced him to Françoise-Louise de Warens, age 29. She was a noblewoman of Protestant background who was separated from her husband. As professional lay proselytizer, she was paid by the King of Piedmont to help bring Protestants to Catholicism. They sent the boy to Turin, the capital of Savoy (which included Piedmont, in what is now Italy), to complete his conversion. This resulted in his having to give up his Genevan citizenship, although he would later revert to Calvinism in order to regain it.


how to get famous
test paternité

taixyz1992
Snitch
Snitch

Number of posts : 310
De/Order/Da : Françoise-Louise de Warens De
House : Françoise-Louise de Warens Bb6d5c5a
Job : Student
Registration date : 2010-10-25

Back to top Go down

Back to top


 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum