François Bournand
Jean François Bournand (25 June 1853 – 27 June 1911) was a French political journalist, art critic and historian.
Contents
Biography
François Bournand was born in Paris. Édouard Drumont's private secretary around 1886, he wrote the news column for La Libre Parole in the late 1890s. With Raphaël Viau, he then contributed to Jules Guérin's La Tribune française (1902–1903)[1] and later to the Journal de la Dordogne.[2]
He was also editor-in-chief of the magazine Le Dessin published by the Revue des beaux-arts. He wrote the introduction to the catalog of the International Exhibition of Works in Black and White in 1885.
Bournand used the pseudonyms "Gaston de Clagnens", "Venezia", "Docteur Nemo", "Jean de Ligneau" and the collective pseudonym "F-R. Hervé-Piraux" with Raphaël Viaux.
He died at the 17th arrondissement of Paris.
Notes
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References
- Bruneteau, Bernard (2015). "Les permanences de l’antisémitisme antimondialiste (fin XIXe-début XXIe siècle)," Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine, No. 62, pp. 225–44.
External links
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- ↑ Viau, Raphaël (1910). Vingt ans d'antisémitisme 1889-1909. Paris: Fasquelle, p. 141, 314.
- ↑ Bluysen, Paul (1908). Annuaire de la presse française et étrangère et du monde politique. Paris: Annuaire de la presse, p. 723.