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French publisher writer and historian From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jacques Jourquin, (born October 28, 1935, in La Madeleine and died November 14, 2021, in the 17th arrondissement of Paris) is a French publisher, writer and historian, specialist in Napoleonic studies. He notably headed Éditions Tallandier during the 1980s.[1][2]
Jacques Jourquin | |
---|---|
Born | 28 October 1935 La Madeleine, France |
Died | 14 November 2021 Paris, France |
Alma mater | HEC Paris Sciences Po |
Occupation(s) | Publisher writer and historian |
A graduate of HEC Paris (1959) and a degree in law and economics (1960), he continued his studies at Sciences Po, Public Service section (1960–1961), studies interrupted by the service military during the Algerian War.[3]
He decided in the midst of his professional activity to take a master's degree in history (1977), before graduating from the École pratique des hautes études for his thesis “Souvenirs du commandant Parquin, édition critique” (1979).[4]
In 1963, Jacques Jourquin joined Éditions Tallandier, at the time a subsidiary of Hachette, and successively became deputy sales director (1963–1967), sales director (1967–1973), director (1974–1981), then CEO (August 5, 1981), appointed to head the company by Jacques Marchandise-Franquet, former president of Hachette and president of Tallandier, whom he succeeded.[5]
At Tallandier, Jacques Jourquin founded, among others, the Bibliothèque napoléonienne collection (1977).
He bought Tallandier from the Hachette group with a partner (December 1981), Hachette having decided to restructure all of its departments.[6]
He was also director of the Historia magazine (August 1981), owned by the publishing house at that time, and launched a revised version of the thematic bimonthly Historia Special (1984).[7] He then sold the company to an investment fund while retaining his functions (1990) and before his departure initiated the purchase of Historama-Histoire magazine and its merger with Historia.
Jacques Jourquin left the presidency of Tallandier in July 1992 and the management of Historia in January 1993, after thirty years of activity in the service of this publishing house.
From 1993, he held positions in the specialized press as director-editor-in-chief of the magazine of the Souvenir napoléonien (until 2005) and as a voluntary delegated editor (1994–2001) then manager-director (2001–2014) of the magazine Vieilles Maisons Françaises.
At the same time, he directed again the Bibliothèque napoléonienne collection on behalf of Éditions Tallandier (2002–2009).
Since the beginning of the 1970s, Jacques Jourquin has devoted himself to research and the publication of historical works on the civil and military personnel of the First Empire.
His first critical edition of Souvenirs du commandant Parquin (1979, new ed. 2003) and his Dictionnaire des maréchaux du Premier Empire (1986, 5th ed. 2001) are among his best-known books.
Jourquin is one of the specialists in the memoirs of Louis-Étienne Saint-Denis, known as the Mamluk Ali: valet, copyist and librarian of Napoleon in Sainte-Hélène, and has devoted four volumes to the subject based on the original manuscripts (2003, 2012, 2015, 2021).
He has hosted numerous symposia and conferences and published dozens of articles. The Académie Française and the Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques have awarded his works six times (1976, 1980, 1982, 1986, 2000, 2005).
His study, La dernière passion de Napoléon : la bibliothèque de Sainte-Hélène, was published in September 2021 by Passés/Composés and concludes a work of around thirty works, alone or in collaboration.[8]
Jacques Jourquin was vice-president of the Institut Napoléon (since 2005) and member of the jury for the history prizes of the Fondation Napoléon (since 2002).[9]
He was decorated Commander of the National Order of Merit (1995) and Officer of the Order of Arts and Letters (2007) by French Ministry of Culture, then Knight of the Order of Academic Palms (2014) by French Ministry of Education, order created by Napoleon.
Non-exhaustive: Jacques Jourquin has published numerous articles.
J. Jourquin signed two books under a pseudonym: a story under the name of Jacques Louvière ("Gallien or the acceptance of being", 1962) and a critical edition under that of Gabriel Dervaux ("Mémoires du général Rapp", 1973).
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