Stanislas-Jean, chevalier de Boufflers (born May 31, 1738, Nancy, France—died January 18, 1815, Paris) was a French writer, soldier, and academician remembered chiefly for his picaresque romance, Aline, reine de Golconde (“Aline, Queen of Golconde”).
His mother, the Marquise de Boufflers, became the mistress of Stanisław Leszczyński, king Stanisław I of Poland and duke of Lorraine, and brought her son up at the ducal court at Lunéville. The boy was destined for a career in the church but proved temperamentally unsuited, and, while studying theology at Saint-Sulpice in Paris, he wrote his masterwork, Aline, a charming tale of a milkmaid who, after a series of improper adventures, becomes queen of Golconda. The story won its author immediate fame but caused his expulsion from Saint-Sulpice.
By joining the Knights of Malta, Boufflers managed to combine qualification for ecclesiastical benefices in Lorraine with the military career more suited to his taste. For the next 24 years he fought in campaigns in Europe, with frequent returns to the salons of Paris, where he established a reputation for wit and fell in love with the Comtesse de Sabran.
After serving as governor of the new French colony of Senegal, he returned to France and won election to the Académie Française (1788). In 1789 he was elected deputy for the nobility of Nancy to the States General, but the Revolution alarmed him, and he emigrated to Germany in 1791. The loss of his benefices permitted him to abandon his vow of celibacy and marry Mme de Sabran at Breslau. In 1800, with Napoleon’s rise to power, Boufflers returned to Paris and supervised the edition of his complete works (1803).