Hélène Carrère d'Encausse(French pronunciation:[elɛnkaʁɛːʁdɑ̃kos];néeZourabichvili;6 July 1929 – 5 August 2023) was a French political historian who specialised inRussian history.From 1999 until her death in 2023, she served as the Perpetual Secretary of theAcadémie Française,to which she was firstelectedin 1990.
Hélène Carrère d'Encausse | |
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Member of the European Parliament | |
In office 1994–1999 | |
Member of theAcadémie Française | |
In office 1990–2023 | |
1999–2023 | Perpetual Secretary |
Personal details | |
Born | Hélène Zourabichvili 6 July 1929 Paris, France |
Died | 5 August 2023 Paris, France | (aged 94)
Political party | Rally for the Republic |
Spouse |
Louis Carrère (m.1952) |
Children | 3, includingEmmanuelandMarina |
Parent |
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Relatives |
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Alma mater | |
Profession | Historian |
Awards |
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Academic background | |
Doctoral advisor | |
Academic work | |
Discipline | History |
Sub-discipline | |
Institutions |
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Notable works |
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Carrère d'Encausse was amember of the European Parliamentbetween 1994 and 1999, representing theGaullist-conservative partyRPR.She was awarded theLomonosov Gold Medaland Grand Cross with Star of theOrder of Merit of the Republic of Polandin 2008 and 2011, respectively. She was a cousin ofSalome Zourabichvili,the currentPresident of Georgia.In 2023 she was awarded thePrincess of Asturias Awardin Social Sciences.
Early life, family and education
editHélène Zourabichvili was born in the16th arrondissement of ParistoGeorges Zourabichvili,aGeorgianémigré ofeducated middle classbackground, and Nathalie von Pelken, a penniless descendant of Prussianbaronsand Russian counts.[1][2]Both parents arrived in Paris in 1925. Her mother had grown up in Tuscany, where the remainder of her Russian family fortune was lost through misinvestment.[3]Of her two maternal great-uncles, the Counts Komarovskii, Viktor was in 1905–1907 the vice-governor ofVyatka,notorious fordefenestratingMuslims, and Georgii a veteran of theSecond Boer War,Russian invasion of ManchuriaandRusso-Japanese Warexecuted in 1920 by the revolutionaries.[4][5]Hélène's father, son of aTiflislawyer and a translator, had fled theBolsheviktakeover of the briefly independentGeorgiain 1921 and studiedphilosophyandpolitical economyinBerlinbefore re-joining his exiled family in Paris;[6][7]he spoke five languages, as did his wife-to-be.[8][9]In contrast to his family's fervent Georgian patriotism, however, he embraced Russian. Both families had been financially affected by theOctober Revolution,but unlike his brothers, Hélène's father did not have a successful career in France. He worked as a cab driver and astalltrader in provincial towns, while Hélène and her mother lived with distant relatives inMeudon,in anethnic enclaveofwhite Russian émigrés.By 1936 her father became a salesman atVilmorinand the family moved to a small flat inVanves.As a child, Hélène spoke Russian at home and only learned French at age four while on holiday inBrittanywith anupper classFrench acquaintance of the family.[10][11]
The family moved toBordeauxin the autumn of 1940, after thedefeat of Franceand the establishment of theVichy state.Hélène's father worked as aninterpreterfor theGerman occupying forces,initially at thecar retailerMalleville et Pigeon.[12]After his dismissal in early 1942 he accepted the offer of one Mariaud, ablack marketdealer who married a Russian émigrée friend of his wife, to assist the German authorities with theconfiscation of Jewish property.[13]He became an earnestcollaborationisteon account of hisanti-Communismand his belief in the rebirth of Europe through the joint forces ofNazism,FascismandChristianity,influenced by his readings ofHenri Béraud,Henri de KérillisandAbel Bonnard.He would celebrateChristmasin the company of a Nazi officer.[14]After theLiberation of Francehe shaved his moustache off to avoid recognition. He attended an interrogation with theDeuxième Bureau[15]on 10 September 1944 and discussed the offer of a prison cell as a protection measure. He was abducted anddisappearedon the same day.[16][9][11][17]Carrère d'Encausse kept her father's Nazi past a secret and reacted negatively when her son Emmanuel disclosed it in his memoirs against her will.[18][19]
After completing her secondary education at the 16th arrondissement'sLycée Molière,[20]Hélène studied history at theInstitut d'Études Politiques de Paris(Sciences Po), graduating in 1952.[17]She completed herDoctorat de troisième cyclein 1963[21]and, in 1976, earned aDoctorat ès lettresfromPanthéon-Sorbonne University(Paris 1) with a dissertation supervised byMaxime RodinsonandRoger Portal.[2][11][22]She lectured in history at both Sciences Po and the Sorbonne.[2]
Russian scholarship
editDue to her interest in her family history,[11]the bulk of Carrère d'Encausse's work focused on Russia and theSoviet Union.She had over two dozen books published in French, many of which have been translated into English.[23]Her 1978 workL'Empire éclaté (English version,Decline of an Empire: The Soviet Socialist Republics in Revolt)[24]predicted that the Soviet Union was destined to break up along the lines ofits 15 constituent republics,although she was incorrect in foreseeing that demographic pressures from the Muslim-majority republics of Central Asia would be the trigger.[25]
In commenting on current Russian affairs, Carrère d'Encausse warned against applying Western yardsticks to Russian democracy and said she regretted the excessive demonisation of the government ofVladimir Putin.[26]Up until the final days beforeRussia's February 2022 invasion of Ukraineshe refused to countenance such an eventuality, although her opinion of Putin changed after the start of hostilities.[27][28]After she died, Putin paid homage to Carrère d'Encausse as "a great friend of our country" and expressed the hope that her legacy would help improve French–Russian relations.[29]
European and domestic politics
editIn 1992, Carrère d'Encausse was invited by Culture MinisterJack Langto chair the committee he had founded to promote a "yes" vote in that year'sreferendum on the Maastricht Treaty,[30]a task that Lang said she performed with "fervour and enthusiasm".[31]
Shewas electedas amember of the European Parliamentin 1994, representingJacques Chirac'sGaullist-conservativepartyRassemblement pour la République(RPR).[32]During her time in the parliament from 1994 to 1999, she sat first with theEuropean Democratic Allianceand later with theUnion for Europegroup, and she served as one of the vice-chairs of theCommittee on Foreign Affairsand as a member of the delegation for relations with Russia.[33]
In 2005, she controversially identifiedpolygamyas one of the causes of France's2005 civil unrest.During an interview given to the Russian television channelNTV,she claimed: "Why can't their parents buy an apartment? It's clear why. Many of these Africans, I tell you, are polygamous. In an apartment, there are three or four wives and 25 children."[34][35]She also said thatpolitical correctnesson French television was "a nightmare" and was almost comparable to media censorship in Russia.[34]
Académie Française
editCarrère d'Encausse was elected to seat 14 of theAcadémie Françaiseon 13 December 1990,[2]then the third woman,[11]and was elected itsPerpetual Secretary on 21 October 1999, making her the first woman to hold its top position.[2][11]Heracademician's sword was made by the Franco-Georgian sculptorGoudji.[36][37]
As a member of the Academy, Carrère d'Encausse opposed both thefeminisation of language,insisting that she be styledMadame le secrétaire perpétuel,andgender-inclusive language,describing theuse of the interpunct to accommodate both genders(as inles auteur·rice·s) as "stupid" because of its impact on the musicality of a text.[38]Her 2020 ruling thatCovidbe considered a feminine noun was also fiercely criticised, including by fellow members of the Academy.[39]
Personal life
editBornstateless,Hélène Zourabichvili acquired French citizenship in 1950.[40]In 1952 she married Louis Édouard Carrère d'Encausse, with whom she had three children:Emmanuel(born 1957), an author, screenwriter and director; Nathalie (1959), a lawyer; andMarina(1961), a physician and broadcast journalist.[41][2][42]Her brother was the composerNicolas Zourabichvili,[9]and she was a cousin ofSalome Zourabichvili,the currentPresident of Georgia.[43]
Carrère d'Encausse died in Paris on 5 August 2023, at age 94.[42]PresidentEmmanuel Macronannounced that he would lead a national homage in her honour at theHôtel des Invalidesbefore the end of the summer.[28][44]
Honours and awards
editHonours
edit- Belgium: Commander of theOrder of Leopold (Belgium)[45]
- Brazil: Commander of theOrder of the Southern Cross[46]
- France: Grand Cross of theLegion of Honour(2011)[47]
- France: Officer of theNational Order of Merit[37]
- France: Commander of theOrdre des Palmes académiques[37]
- France: Commander of theOrdre des Arts et des Lettres[37]
- Monaco: Commander of theOrder of Cultural Merit(November 1999)[48]
- Poland: Commander's Cross with Star of theOrder of Merit of the Republic of Poland[37]
- Russia: Medal of theOrder of Honour (Russia)[49]
Awards
edit- Princess of Asturias Awards(2023; Spain)[50]
- Grande médaille d'or of theSociety for the Encouragement of Progress(2020; France)[51]
- Lomonosov Gold Medal(2008; Russia)[52]
- Ivane Javakhishvili Medal byTbilisi State University(2003, Georgia)[53]
- Prix du nouveau cercle de l'union (2000; France)[54]
- Prix des Ambassadeurs (1997; France)[55]
- Prize Paulée de Meursault (1995; France)[54]
- Prix Comenius(1992; France)[54]
- Prix Aujourd'hui (1978; France)[56]
Honorary degrees
editWorks
editCarrère d'Encausse's page on the website of the Académie Française provides the following list of her publications.[37]
- 1966:Réforme et révolution chez les musulmans de l'Empire russe(Armand Colin), in English:Islam and the Russian Empire: Reform and Revolution in Central Asia(University of California Press, 1988)
- 1966:Le Marxisme et l'Asie (withStuart R. Schram), 1853–1964(Armand Colin)
- 1967:Central Asia, a century of Russian rule, Columbia Univ., réédition 1990(Duke Univ. publication)
- 1969:L'URSS et la Chine devant la révolution des sociétés pré-industrielles (avec Stuart R. Schram)(Armand Colin)
- 1972:L'Union soviétique de Lénine à Staline(Éd. Richelieu), in English:History of the Soviet Union, 1917–1953.(Longman,New York 1981, 1982)
- 1975:La Politique soviétique au Moyen-Orient, 1955–1975(Presses de la F.N.S.P.)
- 1978:L'Empire éclaté: la révolte des nations en URSS (Flammarion), in English:Decline of an Empire: The Soviet Socialist Republics in Revolt.(Newsweek Books, New York 1979)
- 1979:Lénine, la Révolution et le Pouvoir(Flammarion), in English:Lenin: Revolution and Power.(Longman 1981)
- 1979:Staline, l'ordre par la terreur(Flammarion), in English:Stalin: Order through Terror.(Longman 1982)
- 1980:Le Pouvoir confisqué(Flammarion), in English:Confiscated Power: How Soviet Russia Really Works.(Harper and Row,New York 1982)
- 1982:Le Grand Frère(Flammarion), in English:Big Brother: The Soviet Union and Soviet Europe.(Holmes and Meier, New York 1987)
- 1985:La déstalinisation commence(Complexe)
- 1986:Ni paix ni guerre(Flammarion)
- 1987:Le Grand Défi(Flammarion), in English:The Great Challenge: Nationalities and the Bolshevik State, 1917–1930.(Holmes and Meier 1992)
- 1988:Le Malheur russe(Fayard), in English:The Russian Syndrome: One Thousand Years of Political Murder(Holmes and Meier 1992)
- 1990:La Gloire des Nations(Fayard), in English:The End of the Soviet Empire: The Triumph of the Nations.(Basic Books, New York 1993)
- 1992:Victorieuse Russie(Fayard)
- 1993:L'URSS, de la Révolution à la mort de Staline(Le Seuil)
- 1996:Nicolas II, La transition interrompue(Fayard)
- 1998:Lénine(Fayard)
- 2000:La Russie inachevée(Fayard)
- 2002:Catherine II(Fayard)
- 2003:L'Impératrice et l'abbé: un duel littéraire inédit(Fayard)
- 2005:L'Empire d'Eurasie(Fayard)
- 2006:La Deuxième Mort de Staline
- 2008:Alexandre II. Le printemps de la Russie(Fayard)
- 2010:La Russie entre deux mondes (Fayard)
- 2011:Des siècles d'immortalité. L'Académie française 1635-....(Fayard)
- 2013:Les Romanov – Une dynastie sous le règne du sang(Fayard)
- 2015:Six années qui ont changé le monde 1985–1991 – La chute de l'empire soviétique(Fayard)
- 2017:Le général de Gaulle et la Russie(Fayard)
- 2019:La Russie et la France(Fayard)
- 2021:Alexandra Kollontaï. La Walkyrie de la Révolution(Fayard)
References
edit- ^Carrère 2007,p. 61–62, 78–79.
- ^abcdefPaoli, Paul-François (5 August 2023)."Décès d'Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, première femme à la tête de l'Académie française".Le Figaro.Retrieved7 August2023.
- ^Carrère 2007,p. 77–79.
- ^Carrère 2007,p. 22, 73–74.
- ^"Братья КОМАРОВСКИЕ В.В. и Г.В.",Дворяне: книга памяти,Memorial
- ^Carrère 2007,p. 75–77.
- ^"Hélène Carrère d'Encausse".Munzinger Archiv(in German). 2000.Retrieved8 August2023.
- ^Carrère 2007,p. 79, 90.
- ^abcCatinchi, Philippe-Jean (7 August 2023)."Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, first woman to head the Académie Française, has died".Le Monde.Retrieved8 August2023.
- ^Carrère 2007,p. 75, 77–78, 85–87.
- ^abcdefSchmid, Ulrich (6 August 2023)."Die Erste im Kreis der Unsterblichen".FAZ(in German).Retrieved8 August2023.
- ^Carrère 2007,p. 116.
- ^Carrère 2007,p. 116–118.
- ^Carrère 2007,p. 87–88, 117–118.
- ^The Second Bureau continued its counterespionage activities under the Vichy regime, which included surveillance of collaborationists and the underworld. Like the other secret services, it was highly concerned with countering German influence despite the occupation, although it could no longer execute German spies after 1942.Kitson 2008,p. 103, 159–162.
- ^Carrère 2007,p. 119–121.
- ^abTolstoï, Grégoire (8 August 2023)."Immortelle Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, un Pont entre Orient et Occident".Culturius.Retrieved9 August2023.
- ^Noiville, Florence (1 March 2007),"Emmanuel Carrère: « J'avais l'impression d'être enfermé »",Le Monde“Il est, dit Emmanuel Carrère, “le secret de ma mère.... Ce livre était une chose que ma mère m’avait demandé de ne pas faire et que j’estimais ne pas pouvoir ne pas faire”.”
- ^Parker, Ian (4 July 2022),"Emmanuel Carrère Writes His Way Through a Breakdown",New Yorker“By making all this public, Carrère opened a rift with his mother. “For more than two years, there were very, very cold relations,” he told me. In time, they reconciled, he said, “but ‘reconciled’ means never talking about it”.”
- ^Pommier, Juliette (5 August 2023)."L'historienne Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, première femme élue à la tête de l'Académie française, est morte à l'âge de 94 ans".FranceInfro: Culture.Retrieved9 August2023.
- ^Carrere d'Encausse, Hélène (1963)."Bukhara: de la réforme à la révolution: recherches sur le gadidisme à Bukhara".SUDOC.
- ^Carrère d'Encausse, Hélène (1976)."Bolchevisme et nations: des débats théoriques à la consolidation d'un État multinational, 1917–1929".SUDOC.
- ^"Carrère d'Encausse, Hélène: Writings".encyclopedia.com.
- ^Newsweek Books, 1979,ISBN9780882252803
- ^Monluçon, Anne-Marie; Saignes, Anna; Salha, Agathe (15 May 2012)."La chute de l'URSS: une fin d'Empire".Recherches & Travaux(80).doi:10.4000/recherchestravaux.498.
- ^de Villers, Vincent Tremolet (16 March 2018)."Il ne faut pas juger le pouvoir autoritaire de Poutine à l'aune de nos seuls critères".Le Figaro(in French).Retrieved27 October2018.
- ^Mahler, Thomas (24 February 2022)."Guerre en Ukraine: ces" experts "qui assuraient que Poutine n'attaquerait pas".L'Express.Retrieved7 August2023.
- ^ab"Vladimir Poutine espère que «l'héritage» d'Hélène Carrère d'Encausse aidera à améliorer les relations Russie-France".Europe 1 with AFP. 7 August 2023.Retrieved7 August2023.
- ^Poutine espère que "l'héritage" d'Hélène Carrère d'Encausse aidera aux relations Russie-France,TF1 Info,7 August 2023
- ^Lesegretain, Claire (25 August 2006)."Portrait: Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, une passionnée lucide".La Croix.Archived from the original on 7 August 2023.Retrieved8 August2023.
{{cite news}}
:CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^Lang, Jack (6 August 2023)."#helenecarreredencausse".Facebook.Retrieved8 August2023.
- ^"La préparation des élections européennes Mme Carrère d'Encausse représentera le RPR derrière M. Baudis".Le Monde.fr(in French). 28 April 1994.Retrieved2 July2018.
- ^"Fourth parliamentary term: Hélène CARRÈRE D'ENCAUSSE".European Parliament. 6 July 1929.Retrieved7 August2023.
- ^abMillot, Lorraine (15 November 2005)."Banlieues: «Beaucoup de ces Africains sont polygames...» selon Hélène Carrère d'Encausse".Libération.Retrieved7 August2023.
- ^Sciolino, Elaine (18 November 2005)."Immigrant Polygamy Is a Factor in French Unrest, a Gaullist Says".The New York Times.Retrieved8 May2020.
- ^"Goudji et les épées d'académiciens".Canal Académies.8 June 2008.Retrieved8 August2023.
- ^abcdefghi"Hélène Carrère d'Encausse".Académie française(in French).Retrieved6 August2023.
- ^"«Iel» dans le Robert: «un coup de pub» pour Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, de l'Académie française".Le Parisien.23 February 2022.Retrieved7 August2023.
- ^Martel, Frédéric (1 November 2020)."À l'Académie française on refuse toujours la féminisation des mots… sauf pour" la "Covid".Radio France / France Culture.Retrieved7 August2023.
- ^"Mort de l'académicienne Hélène Carrère d'Encausse à l'âge de 94 ans".Reuters.6 August 2023.Retrieved7 August2023.
- ^Martin, Thomas (6 August 2023)."Mort d'Hélène Carrère d'Encausse à Paris: qui sont ses trois enfants?".actu.fr.Retrieved8 August2023.
- ^ab"Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, grande figure de la culture française, est morte".Le Point.5 August 2023.Retrieved6 August2023.
- ^"Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, petite fille du Caucase devenue Secrétaire perpétuel de l'Académie française".Radio France / France Culture. 16 October 2020.Retrieved8 August2023.
- ^"Disparition d'Hélène Carrère d'Encausse".elysee.fr.6 August 2023.Retrieved8 August2023.
- ^Hélène Carrère d'Encaussedialoguefrancorusse.com
- ^Launet, Edouard (5 August 2023)."La croix et la vivandière".Libération(in French).Retrieved6 August2023.
- ^"Hélène Carrère d'Encausse grand'croix de la Légion d'honneur".Franceinfo(in French). 10 December 2012.Retrieved6 August2023.
- ^Sovereign Ordonnance n° 14.274 du 18 Novembre 1999 portant promotionsArchived29 July 2020 at theWayback Machine.Legimonaco.mc (in French). Retrieved 8 May 2020.
- ^Dorman, Veronika (5 August 2023)."Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, la compagne de Russie".Libération(in French).Retrieved6 August2023.
- ^"Hélène Carrère d'Encausse Premio Princesa de Asturias de Ciencias Sociales 2023".10 May 2023.
- ^"S.E.P: Société d'encouragement au Progrès".
- ^"Большая золотая медаль РАН имени М.В. Ломоносова".
- ^"ისტორიკოსი ელენ კარერ დ'ანკოსი (ზურაბიშვილი) 94 წლის ასაკში გარდაიცვალა"[Historian Hélène Carrère d'Encausse (Zourabichvili) died at the age of 94].tabula.ge(in Georgian). 8 August 2023.Retrieved21 October2023.
- ^abc"Foire du livre de Brive".
- ^"Prix littéraires".Le Monde.fr.12 July 1997.
- ^"Le prix Aujourd'hui à Hélène Carrère d'Encausse".Le Monde.fr.8 November 1978.
- ^"Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, Docteure Honoris Causa".2004.
- ^"Docteurs honoris causa depuis 1951".
- ^"Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, Doctorat honoris causa ès lettres".
- ^"L'USJ honore quatre grandes personnalités pour leurs carrières".18 June 2016.
Bibliography
edit- Carrère, Emmanuel(2007),Un roman russe,Paris: P.O.L(fr),ISBN9782846821827(English translation:My Life as a Russian Novel: A Memoir,New York: Metropolitan Books, 2010;ISBN9780805087550)
- Kitson, Simon(2008),The Hunt for Nazi Spies: Fighting Espionage in Vichy France,Chicago: University of Chicago Press,ISBN978-0-226-43893-1
External links
edit- Home page at the Académie française(in French)(archive)