Pierre Gaxotte (19 November 1895 – 21 November 1982) was a French
historian.
Gaxotte was born in
Revigny-sur-Ornain,
Meuse. He began his career as a history teacher at the
Lycée Charlemagne and later worked as a columnist for Le Figaro. Over the course of his life he authored numerous historical studies, and was elected to the Académie française in 1953.[1]
He is famous for his critical vision of the
French Revolution, notably in The French Revolution (1928),[2] and for his rehabilitation of the French 18th century (Louis XV's Century, 1933). He is also known as a far-right-wing journalist of the Entre-deux-Guerres period, with links to the
Action française and the newspaper Je suis partout.
Works in English translation
The French Revolution, C. Scribner's Sons, 1932.[3][4]
Louis XV and His Times, J. B. Lippincott Co., 1934.
Frederick the Great, G. Bell and Sons, 1941 [Rep. by Yale University Press, 1942; Greenwood Press, 1975].[5][6]