Antiokh Dmitriyevich Kantemir (born Sept. 21 [Sept. 10, Old Style], 1708, Constantinople [now Istanbul], Tur.—died April 11 [March 31], 1744, Paris, Fr.) was a distinguished Russian statesman who was his country’s first secular poet and one of its leading writers of the classical school.
The son of Dmitry Kantemir, he was tutored at home and attended (1724–25) the St. Petersburg Academy. Between 1729 and 1731 he wrote several poems, the most important probably being two satires, “To His Own Mind: On Those Who Blame Education” and “On the Envy and Pride of Evil-Minded Courtiers.” These poems denounced the opposition to the reforms of the emperor Peter the Great and enjoyed great success when circulated in manuscript (they were not printed until 1762). As ambassador to England (1732–36), he took to London the manuscript of his father’s history of the Ottoman Empire, furnishing a biography of his father that appeared with the English translation of the history.
From 1736 until his death, Kantemir was minister plenipotentiary in Paris, where he formed friendships with Voltaire and Montesquieu and continued to write satires and fables. His Russian translations of several classical and contemporary authors include his 1740 translation of the French man of letters Bernard Le Bovier de Fontenelle’s Entretiens sur la pluralité des mondes (1686; “Interviews on the Pluralitism of the World”), which was suppressed as heretical. He also wrote a philosophical work, O prirode i cheloveke (1742; “Letters on Nature and Man”), and a tract on the old syllabic system of Russian verse composition (1744).