- Gervais Delarue
Gervais de La Rue (1751-1835), French historical investigator, formerly regarded as one of the chief authorities on Norman and
Anglo-Norman literature , was a native ofCaen . He received his education at the university of that town, and was ultimately raised to the rank of professor.His first historical enterprise was interrupted by the
French Revolution , which forced him to take refuge inEngland , where he took the opportunity of examining a vast mass of original documents in theTower of London and elsewhere, and received much encouragement, fromSir Walter Scott among others. From England he passed over toHolland , still in prosecution of his favorite task; and there he remained until in 1798 he returned to France. The rest of his life was spent in his native town, where he was chosen principal of his university.While in England he bad been elected a member of the
Royal Society of Antiquaries ; and in his own country he was made a corresponding member of the Institute, and was enrolled in theLégion d'Honneur . Besides numerous articles in the "Memoirs of the Royal Society of London", the "Mémoires de l'Institut", the "Mémoires de la Societé d'Agriculture de Caen", and in other periodical collections, he published separately "Essais historiques sur les Bardes, les Jongleurs, et les Trouvères normands et anglo-normands" (3 vols., 1834), and "Recherches historiques sur la Prairie de Caen" (1837); and after his death appeared "Mémoires historiques sur le palinod de Caen" (1841), "Recherches sur la tapisserie de Bayeux" (1841), and "Nouveaux Essais historiques sur la ville de Caen" (1842). In all his writings he displays a strong partiality for everything Norman, and rates the Norman influence on French and English literature as of the very highest moment.References
*1911
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