Amédée-Dominique Dieudonné

Amédée Dominique Dieudonné (6 August 1890 – 1 February 1960) was a French luthier. His instruments sold in Europe and the United States.[1]

Biography

The son of the luthier Albert Dieudonné, Amédée Dominique Dieudonné was born on 6 August 1890[2] in Mirecourt in the Vosges department. Amédée Dominique Dieudonné was formed by Gustave Bazin and then at the Darche workshop in Brussels. After the First World War, he established himself as a luthier in Mirecourt in the 1920s. Specializing in the copies of the Cremona masters, he excelled in the rendering of varnishes, going from red to bright red.

Amédée Dominique Dieudonné died on 1 February 1960, in Mirecourt.[2]

Among his numerous pupils were Charles René Bazin, Jacques then Alfred-Eugène Holder, Pierre Vogelweith, Rambert Würlizer, Victor Aubry, Philippe Coornaert, William Mönig, Jean Striebig, Étienne Vatelot.[2]

Sources

  • René Vannes : Essai d’un dictionnaire universel des luthiers,[3] Librairie Fischbacher, Paris, 1932, 430 pages
gollark: Also, if you mess up a surgery and, say, accidentally kill someone, it's more obvious than if your code turns out to have, some years later, had a security hole.
gollark: The medical licensing thing does seem to go around artificially limiting supply?
gollark: I agree.
gollark: Possibly, but it would be a horrible idea generally so no.
gollark: Also, it would stop basically any hobby programming?

References

  1. Catalogue Würlitzer, 1935.
  2. Amédée Dieudonné, 1890 - 1960 on luthiers-mirecourt.com
  3. Essai d’un dictionnaire universel des luthiers
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