Nicolas Bourbon (1574, Vendeuvre-sur-Barse – 6 August 1644, Paris) was a French clergyman and neo-Latin poet.[1] He wrote in Latin under the name of Nicolaus Borbonius, and under the pseudonyms Horatius Gentilis and Petrus Mola.
Son of a doctor, he studied under political satirist and poet Jean Passerat.[2] Bourbon then held a professorship at the Collège de France and was admitted into the Oratory of Saint Philip Neri in 1630. He was admitted to the Académie Française in 1637 by Cardinal Richelieu, without having solicited the admission.[2] Bourbon is considered one of the greatest Latin poets of France and was described in 1801 as being "equal or superior to any who lived in the last two centuries".[2]
References
edit- ^ Man, James (1753). A Censure and Examination of Mr. Thomas Ruddiman's Philological Notes on the Works of the Great Buchanan: More Particularly on the History of Scotland: ... In a Letter to a Friend. ... Containing Many Curious Particulars of His Life, ... author: and sold. p. 377.
- ^ a b c Aikin, John (1801). General Biography; Or Lives, Critical and Historical, of the Most Eminent Persons of All Ages, Countries, Conditions, and Professions, Arranged According to Alphabetical Order. G. G. and J. Robinson, Pater-Noster-Row; G. Kearsley, Fleet-Street; R. H. Evans (successor to Mr. Edwards), Pall Mall; and J. Wright, opposite Bond-Street, Piccadilly. - Also at Edinburgh for Bell and Bradfute. p. 277.
Further reading
edit