Achille Tenaille de Vaulabelle
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Achille Tenaille de Vaulabelle | |
|---|---|
| Born | 28 October 1799 Châtel-Censoir, Yonne, France |
| Died | 27 March 1879 (aged 79) Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France |
| Occupations | Journalist and politician |
Achille Tenaille de Vaulabelle (28 October 1799 – 27 March 1879) was a French journalist and politician.
The family of Tenaille de Vaulabelle originated in Clamecy, Nièvre, and became one of the main families of Châtel-Censoir. Jean-Baptiste Tenaille de Vaulabelle was killed by the crowd while defending the queen Marie-Antoinette in Versailles. Achille de Vaulabelle was his nephew.[1] and Éléonore Tenaille de Vaulabelle his brother.
Achille Tenaille de Vaulabelle was born in Châtel-Censoir, Yonne, on 28 October 1799. He joined the administration under the Bourbon Restoration as an attaché to the cabinet of the office of the Prefect of the Yonne. He then went to Paris and became a journalist. In 1824 he published Le Nain jaune (Yellow Dwarf) and founded the liberal newspaper Pour et le Contre (Pro and Con). After the July Revolution this became the Révolution de 1830. He was chief editor of the Messager. He worked at the National in 1838. He published the Modern history of Egypt (1835) and History of the Restorations (1844).[2]
The eight volumes of his Histoire des deux Restaurations (1844–1874), covering the Bourbon restoration in France 1814–1830, met with immediate and permanent success. His large history has been the most widely read study of the Restoration, and provided the facts used by most textbooks and popular accounts. His style is elegant, lively, with anecdotes, dialogues, and quotations. Long passages from key documents are included. His hatred of the monarchy shapes every chapter.[3]