Charles-Irénée Castel, abbé de Saint-Pierre (born Feb. 13, 1658, Saint-Pierre-Église, Fr.—died April 29, 1743, Paris) was an influential French publicist and reformist, one of the first modern European writers to propose an international organization for maintaining peace.
In 1693 Saint-Pierre gained a footing at court as almoner to the Duchess d’Orléans, who presented him with the abbacy of Tiron, a comfortable benefice. He entered the French Academy in 1695. From 1712 to 1714 he acted as secretary to Melchior de Polignac, the French plenipotentiary at the Congress of Utrecht, which ended the wars of Louis XIV. Because of the political offense given by his Discours sur la polysynodie (1719; A Discourse of the Danger of Governing by One Minister), in which, among other things, he argued that Louis XIV should not be named “the Great,” Saint-Pierre was dismissed from the French Academy.
Many of the reforms Saint-Pierre preached had a utopian character. His works were almost entirely occupied with an acute criticism of politics, law, and social institutions and proposals for administrative, political, and fiscal reforms. His chief work, Le Projet de paix perpétuelle (1713; A Project for Setting an Everlasting Peace in Europe), exercised influence up to the 20th century. Saint-Pierre proposed a European peace based on the Peace of Utrecht and assured by a European confederation that would name a permanent arbitration council.