Emmanuel Beau de Loménie
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Emmanuel Beau de Loménie | |
|---|---|
| Born | February 4, 1896 Paris, France |
| Died | February 8, 1974 Paris, France |
| Occupation(s) | Journalist, author |
| Relatives | Louis de Loménie (paternal grandfather) |
Emmanuel Beau de Loménie (1896-1974) was a French journalist and political writer.
Emmanuel Beau de Loménie was born on February 4, 1896, in Paris, France.[1] His paternal grandfather, Louis de Loménie, was an essayist.[2]
Career
Beau de Loménie was a journalist and a teacher.[1] He was a contributor to conservative journals like Écrits de Paris, La France catholique or Carrefour.[2]
Beau de Loménie was the author of many political books. He wrote about François-René de Chateaubriand, Édouard Drumont and Charles Maurras.[3] With Les responsabilités des dynasties bourgeoises, he wrote a five-volume study of bourgeois families who supposedly controlled the fate of France, from the French Revolution to World War II.[2] In L'Algérie trahie par l'argent, he wrote a defense of French Algeria, arguing that French civilization was superior.[2] He was also "openly antisemitic".[2]