Guillaume d’Abbes de Cabrebolles

Guillaume d’Abbes de Cabrebolles, also Guillaume d’Abbes, baron de Cabreroles, (21 March 1718, Bédarieux – 1 October 1802, [1] Saint-Martin-d’Aumes) was an 18th-century French lawyer, and Encyclopédiste[2] during the Age of Enlightenment.

Biography

Abbes came from an Occitan family of judges.[3] His father was Guillaume Abbes, seigneur de Courbeson (born 1679), his mother Elisabeth de Valery, married since 1717.

On 11 February 1741, Guillaume d’Abbes de Cabrebolles married Marie Jeanne Aphrodise de Gineste in Béziers with whom he had a daughter, Marie Claire Aphrodise d’Abbes de Cabrebolles. Admitted to the bar in 1741, he practised in this capacity from 1749 to 1789 and worked as correcteur à la chambre des comptes de Montpellier.

Abbes de Cabrebolles was a member of the Académie de Béziers. He wrote the article Physiologie for the Encyclopédie by Diderot and d’Alembert.

Works (selection)

Reference

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