The New Student's Reference Work/Renan, J. Ernest
Renan (re-nän′), J. Ernest, one of the
most eminent authors of the 19th century,
ERNEST RENAN
was born at
Tréguier, France, Feb.
27, 1823. In his
sixteenth year he
was taken by Abbé
Dupanloup to his
seminary at Paris
to be educated for
the priesthood.
After three years
at this seminary,
he entered St.
Sulpice, the great
seminary of the
diocese of Paris.
At St. Sulpice his
attention was
mainly turned to the study of Hebrew,
and to this study, of his own accord,
he added that of German. The result
of these studies was to destroy his faith
in the supernatural or miraculous
element in Christianity, and he therefore
abandoned all idea of the priesthood and
resolved to devote himself to literature.
In 1860 Renan was appointed by Louis
Napoleon a member of the commission
to study the remains of Phœnician civilization.
During this mission he visited Syria
and Palestine and obtained acquaintance
with the latter country, which enabled
him to give such a vivid local coloring to
his Life of Jesus, published two or three
years after his return. In 1861 he was
chosen professor of Hebrew at the College
de France in Paris, but on account of his
religious views was not fully established in
that position until after the fall of the
empire in 1870. Renan's published works
are quite numerous, but the one by which
he is most widely known is his Life of
Jesus, which has been translated into the
languages of all civilized nations. Renan
died at Paris, Oct. 2, 1892.