Voltaire: A Life

Front Cover
Profile Books, Dec 9, 2010 - Biography & Autobiography - 560 pages

We think of Voltaire as the epitome of the Enlightenment; in his own time he was also the most famous and controversial figure in Europe.

Davidson tells the whole, rich story of his life (1694-1778) - his early imprisonment in the Bastille; exile in England and his mastery of English; an obsession with money, of which he made a huge amount; a scandalous love life; his infatuation with Frederick the Great; a long exile on the borders of Switzerland; his passion for watch-making; his human rights campaigns and his triumphant return to Paris to die there as celebrity extraordinaire. Throughout all of this Voltaire's life was always informed by two things: a belief in the essential value of toleration in the face of fanaticism; and in the right of every man to think and say what he liked. It is rare to have such a vivid portrait of a great man.

 

Contents

Maps Note to the Reader
Prologue
16941713
17141718
17181722
17221723
17231726
17261728
17461747
17481749
17501753
17541755
17531759
17601763
17611765
1765

17291733
17311733
17341735
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The quarrel with Mme Denis 17671769
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17501753
1778
Copyright

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About the author (2010)

Ian Davidson worked for the Financial Times for many years (among other things as Paris correspondent and as chief foreign affairs columnist). His earlier Voltaire in Exile (2004), was called 'powerful and illuminating ... revealing and disturbing' by the Sunday Times.

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