Philippe-Sirice Bridel (born Nov. 20, 1757, Begnins, Switz.—died May 20, 1845, Montreux) was a man of letters, known as le doyen Bridel, who advocated an indigenous Swiss literature and tried to awaken a national consciousness in all areas of life. A French-language writer, Bridel helped bring both French- and German-speaking Swiss together in politics as well as in literature and science.
While serving as a pastor at Basel, Château-d’Oex, and Montreux, Bridel devoted most of his attention to literature and to questions of linguistics, natural science, and Swiss history. His poetry is less important than his philological work, Glossaire du patois de la Suisse romande (posthumous, 1866; “Glossary of the Patois of French Switzerland”), and two series of his miscellaneous writings: Étrennes helvétiennes (1783–87; “Helvetic Gifts”) and Conservateur suisse (1813–31; “Swiss Conservator”). The Swiss literary patriotism that he espoused influenced the poet Juste Olivier (1807–76).