Joseph de Maistre
Joseph Marie, comte de Maistre (i.e. sounding the "s" and rhyming with ''
bourgmestre''); that is how it is usually heard at university and in historical movies (as in
Sacha Guitry's 1948 film ''
Le Diable boiteux''. The pronunciation (rhymes with ''
maître'') is sometimes heard under the influence of the modernized pronunciation, adopted by some descendants (such as Patrice de Maistre)}} (1 April 1753 – 26 February 1821) was a
Savoyard lawyer, diplomat, and
political philosopher. He is chiefly remembered as one of the intellectual forefathers of modern
conservatism, noted for his advocacy of
social hierarchy and
monarchy in the period immediately following the
French Revolution. French by
language and
culture, Maistre was nonetheless a subject of the
King of Piedmont–Sardinia, whom he served in various government positions, including stints in the Savoy Senate (1787–1792), as ambassador to the
Russian Empire (1803–1817), and as minister of state to the court in
Turin (1817–1821).
In 1860, Albert Blanc, professor of law at the
University of Turin, in his preface to a collection of Maistre's diplomatic correspondence wrote that
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A key figure of the
Counter-Enlightenment and a precursor of
Romanticism, Maistre regarded monarchy both as
a divinely sanctioned institution and as the only stable
form of government. Maistre argued that the
rationalist rejection of
Christianity was directly responsible for the
Reign of Terror and the chaos that followed the Revolution of 1789 in France. He therefore called for the restoration of the
House of Bourbon to the throne of France and for the ultimate authority of the
Pope in both spiritual and temporal matters.
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