Jacques Lelong

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Jacques Lelong (April 19, 1665August 13, 1721), French bibliographer, was born at Paris.

He joined the Order of the Knights of St. John of Malta at the age of ten, but later joined the Oratorians.[1]

He was a priest of the Oratory, and was librarian to the establishment of the Order in Paris, where he spent his life in seclusion. He first published a Bibliotheca Sacra (1709), an index of all the editions of the Bible, then a Bibliothèque historique de la France (1719), a volume of considerable size, containing 17,487 items to which Lelong sometimes appends useful notes.

His work is far from complete. He vainly hoped that his friend and successor Father Desmolets would continue it; but it was resumed by Charles-Marie Fevret de Fontette, a councillor of the parlement of Dijon, who spent fifteen years of his life and a great deal of money in rewriting the Bibliothèque historique. The first two volumes (1768 and 1769) contained as many as 29,143 items. Fevret de Fontette died on February 16, 1772, leaving the third volume almost finished. It appeared in 1772, thanks to Barbaud de La Bruyère, who later brought out the 4th and 5th volumes (1775 and 1778). In this new edition the Bibliothèque historique is a work of reference of the highest order; it is still of great value.

[edit] References

  1. ^   "Jacques Lelong". Catholic Encyclopedia. (1913). New York: Robert Appleton Company. 

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

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