Louis-Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne (born July 9, 1769, Sens, Fr.—died Feb. 7, 1834, Caen) was a French diplomat and one-time secretary to Napoleon Bonaparte. His Mémoires provide a colourful but not very reliable commentary on the First Empire.
Bourrienne claimed to have been a friend of the future emperor at the military school of Brienne. In the early 1790s he served the Revolutionary government as a diplomat in Germany. He was called to Italy by Napoleon in the negotiations with Austria (May–October 1797) and helped with the drafting of the Treaty of Campo Formio. In 1804 Bourrienne was sent to Hamburg in order to conduct French commercial war measures against Britain. He amassed a considerable fortune in his questionable trade dealings in that post and was recalled in disgrace (1813). During Napoleon’s return from exile (March 1815), Bourrienne supported the Bourbon cause and the restoration of Louis XVIII (July 1815). Subsequently, he served as councillor and minister of state and in the Chamber of Deputies. He wrote a prose drama, L’Inconnu (1792; “The Unknown”), and in 1829–31 his more famous Mémoires.