Acadmie franaise
The Acadmie franaise (French Academy) is a learned body founded in 1570, when King Charles IX granted the charter of an "academy of Music and Poetry" to the poet Antoine de Baf and a musician named Gourville, who named it the Acadmie franaise. The Acadmie functioned informally until February 10, 1635, when Armand-Jean Cardinal Richelieu (minister of Louis XIII) formalised it into a national academy for the literati, and limited the number of its members. In anticipation of this most of the first members were named during 1634.The Acadmie is the French official authority on the usages, vocabulary, and grammar of the French language, although its recommendations carry no legal power and are sometimes disregarded even by governmental authorities. It also encourages the use of French worldwide and awards literary prizes.
As French culture and language have come under increasing pressure with the widespread availability of English media, the Acadmie has tried to prevent the anglicisation of the French language. It is as a direct result of a decision of the Acadmie that the French word for "computer" is "ordinateur" and that the field of study dealing with computers is known as "informatique."
The Acadmie has forty seats, and all members are elected to a specific seat for life. They are known as the immortels (immortals) because of the device, l'immortalit appearing on the seal granted to the Acadmie by Cardinal Richelieu. Famous current and former immortels include author Victor Hugo, author and director Marcel Pagnol, poet and filmmaker Jean Cocteau, playwright Eugne Ionesco, anthropologist Claude Lvi-Strauss, and physicist Louis-Victor de Broglie.
The Acadmie is charged with publishing an official dictionary of the French language. It has done so in 1694, 1718, 1740, 1762, 1798, 1835, 1878, and in 1932-1935. The Acadmie continues work on the most recent (ninth) edition of the dictionary, of which the first volume (A to Enzyme) appeared in 1992, and the second volume (ocne to Mappemonde) appeared in 2000.
Current members of the Acadmie franaise
Listed by seat
Members listed historically by seat
(this section is under construction)Seat 1
Seat 2
Seat 3
Seat 4
Seat 5
Seat 6
Seat 7
Seat 8
Seat 9
Seat 10
Seat 11
Seat 12
Seat 13
Seat 14
Seat 15
Seat 16
Seat 17
Seat 18
Seat 19
Seat 20
Seat 21
Seat 22
Seat 23
Seat 24
Seat 25
Seat 26
Seat 27
Seat 28
Seat 29
Seat 30
Seat 31
Seat 32
Seat 33
Seat 34
Seat 35
Seat 36
Seat 37
Seat 38
Seat 39
Seat 40
External link