French economist, historian and professor
Pierre Émile Levasseur late 19th century
Pierre Émile Levasseur, 3rd Baron Levasseur (8 December 1828 – 10 July 1911), was a French economist, historian, Professor of geography, history and statistics in the
Collège de France , at the
Conservatoire national des arts et métiers and at the
École Libre des Sciences Politiques ,
[1] known as one of the founders and promoters of the study of
commercial geography .
[2]
[3]
Life and work
Collège de France . Professor Pierre Émile Levasseur (
Bibliothèque de la Sorbonne , NuBIS)
Levasseur was born in Paris, France, as son of the jewelry manufacturer Pierre Antoine Levasseur. He was educated at the
École Normale Supérieure in Paris.
[4]
Levasseur began teaching in the lycée at
Alençon in 1852, and in 1857 became professor of
rhetoric at
Besançon . He returned to Paris to become professor at the lycée Saint Louis. In 1868 he was chosen a member of the
Academy of Moral and Political Sciences . In 1872 he was appointed professor of
geography ,
history and
statistics in the
College de France , and subsequently became also professor at the Conservatoire des arts et métiers and at the École libre des sciences politiques, which later became known as the
Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris .
One of Levasseur's 1876 cartograms of Europe, the earliest known published example of this technique.
He strongly believed in the value of using statistics, graphics, and maps to teach the social sciences at a deeper level,
[5] and is credited with inventing the
cartogram as a teaching aid.
Levasseur was president of the
Société d'économie politique .
[6]
Levasseur was one of the founders of the study of commercial geography, and became a member of the Council of Public Instruction and honorary president of the French geographical society.
In 1886, he was elected as a member to the
American Philosophical Society .
[7] Levasseur was elected member of the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1894. He was elected a member of the
American Antiquarian Society in 1905.
[8]
Selected publications
His numerous writings include:
La question de l'or (1858)
Histoire des classes ouvrières en France depuis la conquête de Jules-César jusqu'à la Révolution (1859)
Histoire des classes ouvrières en France depuis la Révolution jusqu'à nos jours (1867)
L'Étude et l'enseignement de la géographie (1871)
La Population française (1889–1892)
L'Agriculture aux États-Unis (1894)
[9]
L'Enseignement primaire dans les pays civilisés (1897)
L'Ouvrier américain (1898)
[10]
Questions ouvrières et industrielles sous la Troisième République (1907)
Histoire des classes ouvrières et de l'industrie en France de 1789 à 1870 (1903–1904)
Grand Atlas de géographie physique et politique (1890–1894).
References
^ Wilhelm Bernsdorf, Horst Knospe. International Lexicon of Sociology. 1980, p. 245.
^ Collier's Encyclopedia: With Bibliography and Index, Vol 12, 1958. p. 311.
^ Robert Leroux (2012). French Liberalism in the 19th Century: An Anthology. p. 244
^ Encyclopedia Americana, Vol. 17, 1965, p. 316
^ Levasseur, Pierre Émile (1876-08-29).
"Memoire sur l'étude de la statistique dans l'enseignenent primaire, secondaire et superieur" . Programme du Neuvieme Congrès international de Statistique, I. Section, Theorie et population : 7–32.
^
ÉMILE LEVASSEUR , Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques, retrieved 2017-08-18
^
"APS Member History" . search.amphilsoc.org . Retrieved 2021-05-21 .
^
American Antiquarian Society Members Directory
^ Veblen, T. B. (1894).
"L'Agriculture aux Etats-Unis . Emile Levasseur" . Journal of Political Economy . 2 (4): 592–596.
doi :
10.1086/250250 .
ISSN
0022-3808 .
^ Henderson, C. R. (1898).
"Review of L'Ouvrier Américain" . American Journal of Sociology . 4 (1): 94–98.
ISSN
0002-9602 .
Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
public domain :
Chisholm, Hugh , ed. (1911). "
Levasseur, Pierre Emile ".
Encyclopædia Britannica . Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 505.
External links
International National Academics People Other