Félicité de La Mennais
0 sources
Félicité de La Mennais
Summary
Félicité de La Mennais is a human[1]. Born in Saint-Malo[2], he… he was born on June 19, 1782[3]. He died in Paris[4]. He died on February 27, 1854[5]. He worked as a Catholic priest[6], philosopher[7], politician[8], translator[9], and theologian[10]. He ranks in the top 0.72% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (219 views/month, #7,250 of 1,000,298).[11]
Key Facts
- Félicité de La Mennais's place of birth was Saint-Malo[2].
- Félicité de La Mennais died in Paris[4].
- Félicité de La Mennais was born on June 19, 1782[3].
- Félicité de La Mennais was born on 1782[12].
- Félicité de La Mennais died on February 27, 1854[5].
- Félicité de La Mennais died on 1854[13].
- Burial took place at Père Lachaise Cemetery[14].
- Félicité de La Mennais's father was Pierre-Louis Robert de la Mennais[15].
- Félicité de La Mennais's mother was Gratienne-Jeanne Lorin[16].
- Félicité de La Mennais held citizenship in France[17].
- French was Félicité de La Mennais's native language[18].
- Félicité de La Mennais worked as a Catholic priest[6].
- Félicité de La Mennais worked as a philosopher[7].
- Félicité de La Mennais worked as a politician[8].
- Félicité de La Mennais worked as a translator[9].
- Félicité de La Mennais worked as a theologian[10].
- Félicité de La Mennais worked as a writer[19].
- Félicité de La Mennais's field of work was philosophy[20].
- Félicité de La Mennais held the position of member of the French National Assembly[21].
- Félicité de La Mennais's religion is recorded as Catholicism[22].
- Félicité de La Mennais's religion is recorded as pantheism[23].
- Félicité de La Mennais was influenced by Adam Mickiewicz[24].
- Félicité de La Mennais was influenced by Louis de Bonald[25].
- Félicité de La Mennais is recorded as male[26].
- Félicité de La Mennais's instance of is recorded as human[27].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
-
Type: Person[28]
-
Country: FR[29]
-
Began / founded: 1782-06-19[30]
-
Ended / dissolved: 1854-02-27[31]
-
MusicBrainz ID: e7011994-11fc-4f8c-be31-e83bd22d8d53[32]
Body
Origins and Family
Born in Saint-Malo[2], Félicité de La Mennais… Recorded date of birth include June 19, 1782[3] and 1782[12]. His father was Pierre-Louis Robert de la Mennais[15]. His mother was Gratienne-Jeanne Lorin[16]. French was his native language[18].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include Catholic priest[6], philosopher[7], politician[8], translator[9], theologian[10], and writer[19]. Félicité de La Mennais's field of work was philosophy[20]. He held the position of member of the French National Assembly[21].
Personal Life
Religious affiliations include Catholicism[22], a Christian denominational family[33], founded in 1054[34] and pantheism[23].
Death and Burial
Recorded date of death include February 27, 1854[5] and 1854[13]. Félicité de La Mennais passed away in Paris[4]. He is buried at Père Lachaise Cemetery[14].
Works and Contributions
Things named for Félicité de La Mennais include Lamennaisia[35], a taxon[36].
Why It Matters
Félicité de La Mennais ranks in the top 0.72% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (219 views/month, #7,250 of 1,000,298).[11] He has Wikipedia articles in 22 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[37] He is known by 72 alternative names across languages and contexts.[38]
Entities named for him include Lamennaisia[35], a taxon[36].
FAQs
Where was Félicité de La Mennais born?
Born in Saint-Malo[2], Félicité de La Mennais…
Where did Félicité de La Mennais die?
Félicité de La Mennais died in Paris[4].
Who were Félicité de La Mennais's parents?
Félicité de La Mennais's father was Pierre-Louis Robert de la Mennais[15]. Félicité de La Mennais's mother was Gratienne-Jeanne Lorin[16].
What did Félicité de La Mennais do for work?
Félicité de La Mennais worked as Catholic priest[6], philosopher[7], politician[8], translator[9], and theologian[10].