Jean-Baptiste Bullet

Jean-Baptiste Bullet (b. in Besançon, 1699 – d. 6 September 1775) was a French writer on philology and antiquities, and the author of Histoire de l'Établissement du Christianisme, a treaty of the existence of God demonstrated by nature in response to the problems evoked by unbelievers against various parts of the holy books. But he is best known for his memoirs of the Celtic language and for his historical research on the of playing cards and his Dissertation on various topics in the history of France. It is in this last work that he argues that the word "fleur de lys" has no similarity with the royal insignia bearing the flower of the same name, but the word "lis" which in Celtic language would have meant "sovereign king."

Biography

He was correspondent of the Royal Academy of Inscriptions and Letters, royal professor of divinity, member of the academies of Lyon and Dijon, and dean of the University of Besançon, where he died in 1775. Besides some theological productions, he wrote: Histoire de l’Établissement du Christianisme, taken solely from Jewish writers, Recherches Historiques sur les Cartes à Jouer and Dissertations sur différents sujets de l'histoire de France. But the reputation of Bullet is principally founded on his Mémoires sur la Langue Celtique, Besançon, 1754–1760, a work which displays much more industry and learning than either taste or judgment.

Works

References

Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

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