Albert Réville
Albert Réville (4 November 1826, Dieppe, Seine-Maritime – 25 October 1906) was a distinguished French Protestant theologian, known for his 'extremist' liberal views.[1] He is also known for being one of the first "intellectuals" to join the Dreyfusard cause when the Dreyfus Affair erupted in the 1890s.[2]
Réville was born in Dieppe, Seine-Maritime. After studying at the universities of Geneva and Strassburg, he became pastor at Luneray (near Dieppe), and from 1851 to 1872 he was pastor of the Walloon church in Rotterdam.[3] In 1880 he became professor of the History of Religions in the Collège de France,[4] during the course of which he helped found the Revue de l'histoire des religions with Maurice Vernes. In 1886, he was appointed as the inaugural President of the new "Fifth Section" for Religious Sciences at the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris.[4]
He was a prolific writer on the comparative history of world religions. In addition to the history of Christianity, he published on the native religions of Central America (about which he gave the 1884 Hibbert Lectures), Chinese religion[4] and the history of the idea of the Devil.
He was a notable advocate of David Strauss' vision hypothesis, that the accounts of the resurrection of Jesus were historically due to a vision caused by nervous tension by Mary Magdalene and subsequent mass hysteria among the disciples.[5]
His son, Jean Réville, was also a theologian.[6]
Translated works
- Storia del Diavolo, Lulu Press, Raleigh (NC), 2018, Italian version of Histoire du Diable (1870), translated by Rev. Marco Lupi Speranza, ISBN 978-0-24-409658-8.
References
- See Ivan Stresnki, Theology and the First Theory of Sacrifice (2003), ch. 3.
- See his memoir, Les étapes d'un intellectuel, à propos de l'affaire Dreyfus (1898).
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One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Réville, Albert". Encyclopædia Britannica. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 224. -
Wood, James, ed. (1907). . The Nuttall Encyclopædia. London and New York: Frederick Warne. - Rush Rhees The Life of Jesus of Nazareth 2007 "This last explanation has in recent times been revived in connection with the so-called vision-hypothesis by Renan and Réville. Mary found the tomb empty, and being herself of a highly strung nervous nature—she had been cured by Jesus of "
- Chisholm 1911.
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