Estienne Durand

Estienne Durand (c. 1586 – 19 July 1618) was a 17th-century French poet.

A provincial controller of wars in the service of Marie de Medicis, he is the author of a pamphlet against Louis XIII, La Riparographie, now lost, which earned him to be broken and burned with his writings on the Place de Grève.

Works

  • Les Épines d'Amour (1604)
  • Méditations (1611)[1]
  • Stances à l'inconstance
gollark: YOU SEEM TO BASICALLY WANT US TO WRITE THE CODE FOR YOU WHILE SAYING "JUST EXPLAIN IT".
gollark: WELL YOUR REQUEST IS ENTIRELY UNREASONABLE.
gollark: Yes, I have seen it.
gollark: Soooo... why is <@236628809158230018> (meant to be) making a new shop with a confusing acronym when he already has Simplify?
gollark: It's hard to make one which:* does not crash immediately* connects to wallet okay* can be mined on* does not have messed up block value

References

  • Preston, VK (2015). "How do I Touch this text?: Or, the Interdisciplines Between: Dance and Theatre in Early Modern Archives", pp. 56–89, in George-Graves, Nadine. "The Oxford Handbook of Dance and Theatre." Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0190698072

Bibliography

  • Frédéric Lachèvre, Estienne Durand, poète ordinaire de Marie de Médicis (1585–1618), Paris, Leclerc, 1905
  • Frédéric Lachèvre, Méditations de Estienne Durand réimprimées sur l'unique exemplaire connu s. l. n. d. (vers 1611) précédées de la vie du poëte par Guillaume Colletet et d'une notice par Frédéric Lachèvre, Paris, Leclerc, 1906
  • Jacques Bainville, Une histoire d'amour, Paris, Cahiers libres, 1929
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