Louis Demaison

Louis Demaison
Born 5 November 1852
Reims
Died 5 May 1937(1937-05-05) (aged 84)
Paris
Occupation Historiographer
Archaeologist
Spouse(s) Marie Poultier (1862-1948)

Louis Demaison (5 November 1852 – 5 mai 1937) was a 19th–20th-century French historiographer, archaeologist, and with Henri Jadart, one of the most significant contributors to the nineteenth/twentieth history of the Marne department.

Biography

Louis Demaison was the grandson of Louis Joseph Demaison-Henriot (1796–1856), a trader who was mayor of Reims in 1837 and 1838 and Sophie Henriot whom he married in 1821.

He began his studies in law and after obtaining his license he followed the courses of Gabriel Monod, Gaston Paris and Darmester at the École pratique des hautes études. An historian graduated from the École Nationale des Chartes in 1876 as palaeographer archivist, he led a parallel administrative career and a career in research with numerous publications alone or with others, including Henry Jadart and Charles Feodor Givelet. A student of Lefèvre Pontalis, he was also an outstanding historian of art and architecture.

He began his career as an archivist of the city of Reims in 1876 and remained in office until his retirement in 1913.

He was a member of numerous scientific societies and academies both national and local, including the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres and the Société française d'archéologie, of which he became inspector in 1903. At its foundation in 1879, he was appointed by the Ministry of Education, a member of the Archaeological Commission responsible for ensuring conservation in France of the "monuments de l'art et de l'histoire" with Henri Jadart and Charles Givelet. A president of the Académie Nationale de Reims from 1914 to 1919, he was also a member of the "Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques" and of the Société des Antiquaires de France. He was also interested in the history of the Reims cathedral, a monument to which he devoted a reference book.

Honours

Books (partial list)

Articles (partial list)

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