Guy Berthiaume (born 1950) is a Canadian historian specialized in the study of Classical Antiquity. He served as Chair and Chief Executive Officer of Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec from June 22, 2009 to June 21, 2014. On April 13, 2014 he was appointed Librarian and Archivist of Canada, effective June 23, 2014.
A native of Montreal, he earned a doctorate from Université Paris VIII in 1976, following an M.A. degree from Université Laval (1973) and a B.A from UQAM (1972). His doctoral thesis, written under the supervision of Marcel Detienne, was published in 1982 under the title Les rôles du mágeiros. Étude sur la boucherie, la cuisine et le sacrifice dans la Grèce ancienne (Leiden and Montreal).
Starting in 1976, the first 20 years of his professional life were dedicated to research administration. After five years at Université de Montréal, he joined the Fonds FCAC (which eventually became the Fonds FCAR), a non-profit organization created by the Government of Québec in 1981. He founded the Scholarships department and subsequently headed the Research Support and Dissemination department.
In 1984, he joined Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) as Assistant Director, Research Services, a position he held until 1987 when he became Assistant to the Vice-Rector, Academic. During this period, Guy Berthiaume sat as a Member of the Executive Committee of the Canadian Association of University Research Administrators (CAURA), an association he chaired from 1989-1990. In 1989, he was named Vice-President of the UQAM Foundation, the university’s fundraising arm. Under his leadership, the Foundation raised more than 31 million dollars over the next seven years.
In 1996, he became a professor with UQAM’s History Department. He devoted the next two years to teaching Classical Antiquity. After spending a year at the helm of UQAM’s Office of Partnerships (1999), he was appointed in 2000 to serve as Director of the Canadian Students’ House at the Cité internationale universitaire de Paris. Over the next two years, he organized the festivities for the 75th anniversary of the House (October 2001) and edited the proceedings of a colloquium held on September 10, 2001 (La Cité internationale universitaire de Paris. 75 ans d'évolutions, Paris, 2002).