Antoine-Alexandre Barbier

French librarian
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Quick Facts
Born:
Jan. 11, 1765, Coulommiers, Fr.
Died:
Dec. 5, 1825, Paris (aged 60)

Antoine-Alexandre Barbier (born Jan. 11, 1765, Coulommiers, Fr.—died Dec. 5, 1825, Paris) was a French librarian and bibliographer who compiled a standard reference directory of anonymous writings and who helped in preserving scholarly books and manuscripts during and after the French Revolution.

In 1794 Barbier became a member of the temporary commission of the arts and was charged with distributing among the various libraries of Paris the books confiscated during the Revolution. A few years later, under the Directory, he became a member of the council for the preservation of works in the arts and sciences. During his work he discovered and saved the letters of Pierre-Daniel Huet, bishop of Avranches, and, more important, the manuscripts of the works of François Fénelon, the celebrated 17th-century author and theologian. Although Barbier had been ordained priest, his main passion was for books, and in 1801 he was released from his orders. He became librarian successively to the Directory, to the Conseil d’État, and, in 1807, to Napoleon, for whom he also researched scholarly answers to political and religious problems. His Dictionnaire des ouvrages anonymes et pseudonymes (1806–09; “Dictionary of Anonymous and Pseudonymous Works”) is still a standard library reference. He helped found the libraries of the Louvre museum, and under Louis XVIII he was administrator of the king’s private libraries until he was abruptly dismissed in 1822.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.