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Guillaume Budé

Guillaume Budé (or Budeaeus) (1467 - August 23, 1540), French scholar, was born at Paris.

He went to the university of Orleans[?] to study law, but for several years, being possessed of ample means, he led an idle and dissipated life. When about twenty-four years of age he was seized with a sudden passion for study, and made rapid progress, particularly in the Latin and Greek languages.

The work which gained him greatest reputation was his De Asse et Partibus (1514), a treatise on ancient coins and measures. He was held in high esteem by Francis I, who was persuaded by him, and by Jean du Bellay, bishop of Narbonne, to found the Collegium Trilingue, afterwards the College de France[?], and the library at Fontainebleau, which was removed to Paris and was the origin of the Bibliothèque Nationale[?].

He also induced Francis to refrain from prohibiting printing in France, which had been advised by the Sorbonne ~fl 1533. He was sent by Louis XII to Rome as ambassador to Leo X, and in 1522 was appointed maître des requltes and was several times prévôt des marchands. He died in Paris on the 23rd of August 1540.

Budé was also the author of Annotationes in XXIV libros Pandectarum (1508), which, by the application of philology and history, had a great influence on the study of Roman law, and of Commentarii linguae Graecae (1529), an extensive collection of lexicographical notes, which contributed greatly to the study of Greek literature in France. Budé corresponded with the most Learned men of his time, amongst them Erasmus, who called him the marvel of France, and Thomas More.

He wrote with equal facility in Greek and Latin, although his Latin is inferior to his Greek, being somewhat harsh and full of Greek constructions. His request that he should be buried at night, and his widow's pen profession of Protestantism at Geneva (where she retired tfter his death), caused him to be suspected of leanings towards Calvinism. At the time of the massacre of St Bartholomew[?], the members of his family were obliged to flee from France. Some took refuge in Switzerland, where they worthily upheld the traditions of their house, while others settled in Pomerania under the name Budde or Buddeus.

See Le Roy, Vita G. Budaei (1540); D Rebitté, G Budé, restaurateur 4es études grecques en France (1846); E de Budé, Vie de G. Budé (1884), who refutes the idea of his ancestor's Protestant views; D'Hozier, La Maison de Budé; L Delaruelle, Études sur l'humanisme français (1907).

This entry was originally from the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.



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