Henry Harrisse

Henry Harrisse during the second half of the nineteenth century
Prime sharing of modern worlds, Treaty of Tordesillas, 1494. Henry Harisse, The diplomatic history of America.[1]

Henry Harisse (1829 - May 1, 1910), is a man of letters, art critic, lawyer and Americanist historian, author of many books on the first discoveries of America and geographic representations of the New World.

Biography

Henry Harisse was born in Paris May 28, 1829, Abraham, furrier, probably from Russia or Prague, and Nanine Marcus, Paris [2][3] Very young, he moved to his American family and takes the nationality of the country. He studied at the University of South Carolina and began his academic career at the University of North Carolina. He teaches letters, philosophy and law? According to his biographer Henri Cordier his early writings are devoted to Taine [4] and Renan and it would have annotated the works of metaphysical Descartes.[1] But the turn of his mind focused on the study of the origins of modern America s and he gave himself ardently.[3] This will lead to the exploration of the archives of the discovery of the Americas and achieving a critical and complete historical Oevre of this object.

Bibliography

The work of Henry Harisse is published in English and/or French:

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Harrisse, Henry (1897), The diplomatic history of America: its first chapter 1452-1493-1494: XVIe-XIXe siècle: 1494-1897, London: BF External link in |title= (help) Stevens. BNF . Accessed 13 January 2012.
  2. Notes Georges Lubin in the index Correspondents' Correspondence of George Sand
  3. 1 2 Henry Vignaud (1911). "Henry Harrisse". persee.fr. Journal of the Society of Americanists. Volume 8-1-2, 1911. pp. 286-288. Retrieved 13 January 2012.
  4. This is the famous Magny dinners restaurant Sand and Taine (1828-1893 ) were to meet regularly and find themselves in the company of the American lawyer who presented the Henry Harisse perhaps one to another. Reid, Martine; Tillier, Bertrand (1999), The ABCs of George Sand: XVIIe-XIXe siècle: 1804-1999, Paris: Flammarion External link in |title= (help). BNF 37047639j
  5. Henry Harrisse (1872). Bibliotheca Americana Vetustissima: A Description of Works Relating to America Published Between the Years 1492 and 1551. Librairie Tross.
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