Academie_de_Marseille

Académie de Marseille

Académie de Marseille

Add article description


The Académie de Marseille, officially the Académie des sciences, lettres et arts de Marseille, is a French learned society based in Marseille. It was founded in 1726 and includes those in the city involved in the arts, letters, and sciences.

Quick Facts Founder, Location ...

History

The Académie de Marseille was created by letters patent of Louis XV in August 1726, which stated in particular that the number of members would be limited to twenty. The founding document furthermore stated that all twenty members must live in Marseille. However, the actual number of founding members was twenty-one, due to the insistence of Jean-Pierre Rigord [fr] that Henri de Belsunce also be offered membership. This was rectified in 1730 when Joseph-Félix de Gravier [fr] resigned from the Académie and was not replaced.

Founding Members

More information Name, Profession ...

Bibliography

  • Dassy, Abbé (1877). L'académie de Marseille, ses origines, ses publications, ses archives, ses membres. Barlatier-Feissat. Retrieved 2014-07-24.

43°17′50″N 5°23′7.11″E



Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Academie_de_Marseille, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.