Étienne Dolet

French scholar and printer
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Quick Facts
Born:
Aug. 3, 1509, Orléans, France
Died:
Aug. 3, 1546, Paris (aged 37)
Notable Works:
“Commentarii linguae Latinae”

Étienne Dolet (born Aug. 3, 1509, Orléans, France—died Aug. 3, 1546, Paris) was a French humanist, scholar, and printer whose Commentarii linguae Latinae contributed notably to Latin scholarship. He is often described as “the first martyr of the Renaissance.”

After studying at Paris and the universities of Padua and Venice, Dolet settled in Toulouse, France. His quarrelsome temperament, unrestrained enthusiasm for Renaissance learning, and anticlericalism involved him in personal and public controversies. He was banished from the University of Toulouse and moved to Lyon, where for a time he was imprisoned for the justifiable homicide of a painter; he was released by royal pardon.

An ardent Ciceronian, he answered Erasmus’ attack on slavish imitations of Cicero’s style with Dialogus de imitatione ciceroniana (1535) and in 1536 published the first volume of his Commentarii; the second followed in 1538. This work was dedicated to Francis I, who gave him permission to set himself up as a printer. His first publication, Cato Christianus (“The Christian Cato”), was a profession of his creed as a Christian moralist. Cato was followed by Dolet’s translations and editions of classical authors, Erasmus, the New Testament and Psalms, and Rabelais.

He was accused of atheism three times on the double charge of having published Calvinistic works and a dialogue by Plato denying the immortality of the soul, and he was imprisoned in 1542, 1544, and 1546. He was finally condemned by the theological faculty of the Sorbonne and, having first been tortured, was burned at the stake.

Whether Dolet was a Protestant or an anti-Christian rationalist and freethinker is debatable. He was condemned by both Calvin and the Roman Catholic church, but he published many religious books and repeatedly advocated the reading of the Scriptures in the vernacular. It seems likely that his fate was the result of his capacity to make enemies rather than the result of his opinions.

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