Voltaire |
Biography of Voltaire
(1694–1778). In his 84 years Voltaire
was historian and essayist, playwright and storyteller, poet and philosopher,
wit and pamphleteer, wealthy businessman and practical economic reformer. Yet
he is remembered best as an advocate of human rights. True to the spirit of the
Enlightenment, he denounced organized religion and established himself as a
proponent of rationality (see Enlightenment).
Voltaire was born François-Marie Arouet
on Nov. 21, 1694, in Paris. At 16 he became a writer. He wrote witty verse
mocking the royal authorities. For this he was imprisoned in the Bastille for
11 months. About this time he began calling himself Voltaire.
Another dispute in 1726 led to exile in
England for two years. On his return to Paris he staged several unsuccessful
dramas and the enormously popular ‘Zaïre'. He wrote a life of Swedish king
Charles XII, and in 1734 he published ‘Philosophical Letters', a landmark in
the history of thought. The letters, denouncing religion and government, caused
a scandal that forced him to flee Paris. He took up residence in the palace of
Madame du Châtelet, with whom he lived and traveled until her death in 1749.
In 1750 Voltaire went to Berlin at the
invitation of Prussia's Frederick the Great. Three years later, after a quarrel
with the king, he left and settled in Geneva, Switzerland. After five years his
strong opinions forced another move, and he bought an estate at Ferney, France,
on the Swiss border. By this time he was a celebrity, renowned throughout
Europe. Visitors of note came from everywhere to see him and to discuss his
work with him. Voltaire returned to Paris on Feb. 10, 1778, to direct his play
‘Irene'. His health suddenly failed, and he died on May 30.
‘Candide', the strongly anti-Romantic
comic novel, is the work by Voltaire most read today. His other writings
include ‘Zadig' (1747), ‘The Century of Louis XIV' (1751), ‘Micromégas' (1752),
‘The Russian Empire under Peter the Great' (1759–63), ‘The Philosophical
Dictionary' (1764), and ‘Essay on Morals' (1756).
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