Marie-Henri Beyle, better known by his pen …

Years: 1814 - 1814

Marie-Henri Beyle, better known by his pen name Stendhal, born on January 1783 in Grenoble, Isère, had had an unhappy childhood in in what he found to be stifling provincial France, disliking his "unimaginative" father and mourning his mother, who had died when he was young.

His closest friend was his younger sister, Pauline, with whom he had maintained a steady correspondence throughout the first decade of the nineteenth century.

The military and theatrical worlds of the First French Empire were a revelation to Beyle, who had been named an auditor with the Conseil d'État on August 3, 1810, and had thereafter taken part in the French administration and in the Napoleonic wars in Italy.

Traveling extensively in Germany, he had had been part of Napoleon's army in the 1812 invasion of Russia.

Beyle had left for Italy after the 1814 Treaty of Fontainebleau, taking up the expatriate’s life in Milan and embarking full-time on a writing career under the pen name Stendahl (as well as one hundred others).

Scholars in general believe he borrowed this nom de plume from the German city of Stendal in homage to Johann Joachim Winckelmann.

Within the year, he completes his first work, The Lives of Haydn, Mozart and Metastasio, which, although largely plagiarized, reveal an originality.

Related Events

Filter results