Denis Dominique Cardonne (23 March 1721 – 25 December 1783) was a French orientalist and translator.

Biography

Denis Dominique Cardonne, born in Paris on March 23, 1721, he was brought at the age of nine to Constantinople, where he lived for twenty years before returning to France, where he became the secretary-interpreter of the king in oriental languages, royal censor and inspector of the library. He was nominated as a professor of the Collège royal, where he was the titular of the chair for Turkish and Persian from 1750 to his death.[1]

He is the grandfather of the Desgranges brothers, Antoine Jérôme Desgranges (24 December 1784 - 1864) and Alix Desgranges (1793-1854), both orientalists. The former was a student at the École des Jeunes de langues from November 1793 to Brumaire year IX, and then moved to Constantinople, while the latter was made count and became a professor in Turkish at the École des jeunes de langues de Louis Le Grand and the Collège de France in 1833, until he was replaced in the latter by Joseph Matturin Cor on April 5, 1854.

Works

  • Histoire de l'Afrique et de l'Espagne sous la domination des Arabes. 1765.

Traductions

References

  1. Pierre Larousse (1867). Grand Dictionnaire universel du xixe siècle, vol. III.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.