Jump to content

Zoé Oldenbourg

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Oldenbourg)

Zoé Oldenbourg
Born(1916-03-31)31 March 1916
Petrograd, Russia
Died8 November 2002(2002-11-08) (aged 86)
OccupationWriter, historian
NationalityFrench
GenreMiddle Ages, History of France, Crusades, Cathars

Zoé Oldenbourg (Russian: Зоя Сергеевна Ольденбург, romanized: Zoya Sergeyevna Oldenburg; 31 March 1916[1] – 8 November 2002)[2] was a Russian-born French popular historian and novelist who specialized in medieval French history, in particular the Crusades and Cathars.

Life

[edit]

She was born in Petrograd, Russia into a family of scholars and historians. Her father Sergei was a journalist and historian, her mother Ada Starynkevich was a mathematician, and her grandfather Sergei was the permanent secretary of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Saint Petersburg.[3] Her early childhood was spent among the privations of the Russian revolutionary period and the first years of communism. Her father fled the country and established himself as a journalist in Paris.

With her family, she emigrated to Paris in 1925 at the age of nine and graduated from the Lycée Molière [fr] in 1934 with her Baccalauréat diploma. She went on to study at the Sorbonne and then she studied painting at the Académie Ranson. In 1938 she spent a year in England[4] and studied theology. During World War II she supported herself by hand-painting scarves.

She was encouraged by her father to write and she completed her first work, a novel, Argile et cendres in 1946. Although she wrote her first works in Russian, as an adult she wrote almost exclusively in French.[5]

She married Heinric Idalovici in 1948[6] and had two children, Olaf and Marie-Agathe.[7]

Work

[edit]

She combined a high level of scholarship with a deep feeling for the Middle Ages in her historical novels. Her first novel, The World is Not Enough, offered a panoramic view of the twelfth century. Her second, The Cornerstone, was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection in America. Other works include The Awakened, The Chains of Love, Massacre at Montsegur, Destiny of Fire, Cities of the Flesh, and Catherine the Great, a Literary Guild selection. In The Crusades, Zoe Oldenbourg returned to writing about the Middle Ages.[8]

Awards

[edit]

She won the Prix Femina for her 1953 novel La Pierre angulaire.

Works

[edit]

Fiction

[edit]
  • Argile et cendres (1946), published in English as The World is Not Enough (translated by Willard A. Trask).
  • La Pierre angulaire (1953), published in English as The Corner-stone (translated by Edward Hyams).
  • Réveillés de la vie (1956), published in English as The Awakened (translated by Edward Hyams).
  • Les Irréductibles (1958), published in English as The Chains of Love (translated by Michael Bullock).
  • Les Brûlés (1960), published in English as Destiny of Fire (translated by Peter Green).
  • Les Cités charnelles, ou L'Histoire de Roger de Montbrun (1961), published in English as Cities of the Flesh, or The Story of Roger de Montbrun (translated by Anne Carter).
  • Catherine de Russie (1966), published in English as Catherine the Great (translated by Anne Carter).
  • La Joie des pauvres (1970), published in English as The Heirs of the Kingdom (translated by Anne Carter).
  • La Joie-souffrance (1980).
  • Le Procès du rêve (1982).
  • Les Amours égarées (1987).
  • Déguisements (1989), short stories.

Non-fiction

[edit]
  • Le Bûcher de Montségur, 16 mars 1244 (1959), published in English as Massacre at Montségur: A History of the Albigensian Crusade (translated by Peter Green).
  • Les Croisades (1965), published in English as The Crusades (translated by Anne Carter).
  • Saint Bernard (1970), includes a selection of texts on Saint Bernard by Abélard, Pierre le Vénérable, Geoffroi de Clairvaux, Bérenger de Poitiers and Bossuet.
  • L'Épopée des cathédrales (1972).
  • Que vous a donc fait Israël ? (1974).
  • Visages d'un autoportrait (1977), autobiography.
  • Que nous est Hécube ?, ou Un plaidoyer pour l'humain (1984).

Plays

[edit]
  • L'Évêque et la vieille dame, ou La Belle-mère de Peytavi Borsier, pièce en dix tableaux et un prologue (1983).
  • Aliénor, pièce en quatre tableaux (1992).

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Encyclopedia of World Literature in the Twentieth Century: O to Z, Volume 3 (F. Ungar, 1971: ISBN 0-8044-3094-2), p. 11.
  2. ^ Histoires littéraires: Revue trimestrielle consacrée à la littérature française des XIXème et XXème siècles 4/13-14 (2003): 124.
  3. ^ Christiane P. Makward and Madeleine Cottenet-Hage, Dictionnaire littéraire des femmes de langue française (KARTHALA Editions, 1996: ISBN 2-86537-676-1), p. 448.
  4. ^ Dictionnaire littéraire... October 2010
  5. ^ Lucille Frackman Becker, Twentieth-Century French Women Novelists (Twayne Publishers, 1989: ISBN 0-8057-8251-6), p. 55.
  6. ^ Cf. Wilson, p.936
  7. ^ European Biographical Directory, vol. 2 (Editions Database, 1991), p. 1627.
  8. ^ Oldenbourg, Zoé (1966). The Crusades. New York, N.Y: Random House. pp. the book jacket.

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]