Historical and Commemorative
Medals
Collection of Benjamin Weiss
VOLTAIRE
WAECHTER, Georg Christian: France, 1770, Bronze, 59 mm François-Marie Arouet de Voltaire (1694-1778) was a
French philosopher, historian, dramatist, poet, writer, and satirist. He is
remembered primarily as a crusader against tyranny and bigotry and is
considered the embodiment of the 18th-century Enlightenment. Voltaire was born in Paris into a middle-class family. He
was educated by the Jesuits at the Collège Louis-le-Grand (1704-11) and
worked as a secretary to the French ambassador in Holland. From the
beginning, Voltaire had troubles with the authorities, but he energetically
attacked the government and the Catholic church. These activities led to
numerous imprisonments and exiles. In his early twenties he spent eleven
months in the Bastille for writing satiric verses about the aristocracy.
Voltaire did not support the dogmatic theology of institutional religions.
He dismissed the doctrines about the Trinity or the Incarnation as nonsense.
As a humanist, he advocated religious and social tolerance, though in his
later years Voltaire produced several anti-religious writings. In 1716
Voltaire was arrested and exiled from Paris, and later was imprisoned in the
Bastille for lampoons of the Regency. During his stay at the Bastille,
Voltaire was visited by a flow of admirers. Between 1726 and 1729 he lived
in exile mainly in England. There he was strongly influenced by John Locke
and Isaac Newton and wrote a classic biography of Charles XII. He also wrote
plays, poetry, historical and scientific treatises and became the royal
historiographer. His best known work was the philosophical romance
Candide, which in 1957 Leonard Bernstein made into a highly
successful musical comedy. Voltaire died in Paris in 1778 as the undisputed leader
of the Age of Enlightenment, and at the time of his death at eighty-four he
left behind him over fourteen thousand known letters and over two thousand
books and pamphlets. LINK to
Biography of Voltaire (from Wikipedia)
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