Claude-Carloman de Rulhière (born June 12, 1734, Bondy, Fr.—died Jan. 30, 1791, Bondy) was a French writer and historian of Russia and Poland whose histories favoured a return to Franco-Prussian friendship and alliance at the expense of Russia.
The son of a nobleman and government official, Rulhière joined the military after his graduation from the college of Louis-le-Grand, serving as aide-de-camp to marshal Louis-François-Armand, duc de Richelieu, at Bordeaux from 1758 to 1759. Made secretary of the French envoy to Russia, he accompanied him to St. Petersburg, witnessing, in 1762, the dethronement and death of Peter III and the accession of Catherine II. In 1768 he was charged with writing a history of Poland for the young Louis XVI and the same year completed the first chapter of his Histoire de la révolution de Russie en 1762, based on his detailed personal records. On the appearance of the second chapter in 1773, he was apparently harassed by Russians in Paris who wanted to suppress the manuscript, which he had intended for private circulation. After travelling in Germany, Austria, and perhaps Poland in 1776, he returned to the writing of his Histoire de l’anarchie de Pologne, 4 vol. (1807), based on personal interviews and correspondence. Although his history of Poland is no longer regarded highly, it is important as one of the few valuable sources not destroyed in the Revolution. A well-known literary figure and author of several poetic works apart from his historical books, he was elected to the Académie Française in 1787.