Of the influential
philosophers of the 20th century one name stands out because it is
that of a woman, Simone de Beauvoir (1908-1986). During her lifetime her
relationship with fellow French philosopher Jean Paul Satre and others was
well-known, and she also had several with women. Simone never labelled herself
sexually, either as a bisexual or heterosexual. As a philosopher she would have
used semantics to dodge such labels.
As a philosopher Simone’s
contributions to modern thought helped to change philosophy from the stuffy
gobbledigook of academia into something more glamorous and, dare I say it,
sexy. It was the circles in which she moved which made it so, and like many
philosophers they encompassed those of differing political, social and
religious backgrounds. Existentialism was that new glamorous philosophy. For a
more detailed explanation of it you can find massive amounts of information on
the internet.
Simone’s immediate
ancestry was centred round law, politics and banking. Her mother’s family, the
Brasseurs, were important members of the political and industrial scene in
Luxembourg and Belgium. Her great-grandfather Hubert Brasseur (1823-1890)
became a professor of political economics at Ghent University. In 1855 he
created a religious stir when he and a fellow professor denied the divinity of
Christ. Even though he had the support of the Belgian Prime Minister, a
practicing Catholic, the Catholic Church reacted in typical manner and declared
that parents should not send their children to Ghent. Whether this legacy
passed down to Simone de Beauvoir and influenced her own atheist belief is
difficult to say, but her ancestry contains other differences of religious
opinion.
On her father’s side
Simone has a large amount of aristocratic blood. Her great-great-grandfather
Claude Bertrand de Beauvoir married the sister of Edme Georges Champeaux de
Vauxdimes who before becoming a Catholic priest was a lieutenant in the French
infantry. In 1791 the Revolutionary government of France introduced a law
forcing all clergy to sign an oath of loyalty which restricted, and in some
cases abolished, certain rights of the church over the state.
Edme was one of many who
refused to sign the oath was forced to escape the authorities by joining the
refugee army, called the Army of Condé, in the German Rhineland. As an
ex-soldier he was no stranger to armed conflict and seems to have stayed with
the army until it was disbanded in 1801. In 1803 Edme got a job as a headmaster
in Bordeaux and then as Professor of Philosophy at the new university of France
in Orléans from 1809 to 1815.
Through the Champeaux
family Simone de Beauvoir has a lot of important family connections to the old
duchy of Burgundy. Her direct ancestor, Georges de Champeaux, Seigneur de
Préfontaine (1701-1788) was grandson of a member of the Milletot family. Other
members of that family filled many legal and official positions at the
Burgundian court for several generations.
A couple of generations
further back and the Champeaux’s married into another well-connected Burgundian
family, the Clugnys. Perhaps the most significant of Simone’s Clugny ancestors
was the wife of her ancestor Jacques de Clugny, Seigneur de Meneserre
(c.1450-1512). Her name was Countess Adrienne de Bourgogne-Nevers. To
genealogists she is called a “gateway ancestor” because she belonged to a
family whose ancestry is well established and links to royal and imperial
families that can be traced back hundreds of years. As her name suggests the
Countess was a member of the royal Burgundian dynasty herself. Although born
illegitimate Adrienne was legitimated in 1463, less than a year before her
father’s death.
The royal dynasty of
Burgundy from which Simone de Beauvoir descends through Countess Adrienne is
referred to as the House of Valois-Burgundy because the male line stems from
the royal French dynasty of Valois. King Jean II de Valois of France (1319-1364)
granted the duchy of Burgundy to one of his sons, Prince Philippe, who married
the widow of the previous Duke of Burgundy in 1369. He became Prince Philippe
II “the Bold”, first Valois Duke of Burgundy. Countess Adrienne (technically a
princess after her legitimisation) is one of his great-grandchildren.
Simone de Beauvoir’s
unbroken line of French ancestry reaches even further back through the Valois
kings of France, all the way back to the dynastic founder King Hughes de Capet
(d.996), and even further back than that to the Emperor Charlemagne, King of
the Franks (742-814). It is even probable that Simone’s unbroken French DNA can
go way, way back to the Merovingian kings of France and their dynastic founder
Marcomir de Toxandrie, Chief of the Salian Franks, who died in 281. Even I
can’t prove my own unbroken British ancestry that far back!
Where did Simone de
Beauvoir’s philosophical heritage come from? I’d like to think that it was a
mixture of her bourgeois ancestry which gave her the social ability to express
her thoughts freely, and her character which attracted male thinkers to her
without criticism of her gender. Female philosophers were rare in those days,
and females who expressed their thoughts ever rarer.
No comments:
Post a Comment