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Roger de Beauvoir

Roger de Beauvoir
Beauvoir, Roger de, Petit et Trinquart, BNF Gallica.jpg
Born Eugène Auguste Roger de Bully
(1806-11-08)8 November 1806
Paris
Died 27 August 1866(1866-08-27) (aged 59)
Nationality French
Occupation writer
Spouse(s) Léocadie Doze
Signature
Roger de Beauvoir Autograph.svg

Roger de Beauvoir (8 November 1806, Paris – 27 August 1866) was the pen name of French Romantic novelist and playwright Eugène Auguste Roger de Bully.

His wit, good-looks and adventurous lifestyle made him well known in Paris, where he was a friend of Alexandre Dumas, père. Of independent means, he wed actress and author Léocadie Doze in 1847. He was imprisoned for three months and fined 500 francs for a satirical poem, Mon Procs, written in 1849. Afflicted with gout and nearly destitute from his flamboyant lifestyle, he spent the last few years of his life unhappily confined to a chair, dying in Paris.

His best-known works included Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges (1840), Les Oeufs de Paques (1856) and Le Pauvre Diable (reprinted 1871).

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "". Encyclopædia Britannica. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 



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