Robert d'Harcourt
Robert d'Harcourt (23 November 1881 – 18 June 1965) was a French Catholic intellectual, scholar of German culture and anti-Nazi polemicist.
Early years
A member of the aristocratic Norman
D'Harcourt studied Germanic literature at university. His doctoral dissertation was on the Swiss poet and novelist Conrad Ferdinand Meyer.
During World War I, d'Harcourt served in the artillery with the rank of sergeant. He was severely wounded twice during the conflict. Eventually taken prisoner, he recounted his experiences in his memoir, Souvenirs de captivité et d'évasion d'un camp de Bavière. After the war, he obtained the chair of German language and literature at the
Anti-Nazism
D'Harcourt's knowledge of German culture and his anti-Nazi views led him to publish numerous detailed articles attacking the new Nazi regime after Hitler achieved power in 1933. In 1936 he published l'Évangile de la force (The Gospel of Force), his best-known work. It was a harsh attack on Nazism and particularly drew attention to the indoctrination of young Germans in Nazi ideology. Harcourt stressed the incompatibility between the radical racist nature of Nazi ideology and Christianity.
During the Occupation, d'Harcourt became a leading intellectual figure in the Resistance, publishing in the clandestine press.[1] His two sons, Anne-Pierre d'Harcourt (1913–1981) and Charles d'Harcourt (1921–1992), were both sent to Buchenwald concentration camp but survived the war.
Post-war
After the war d'Harcourt was one of five new members elected on 14 February 1946 to the
D'Harcourt died in 1965, and rests in the cemetery of Pargny-lès-Reims.[1]
Private life
In July 1912, Harcourt married Ghislaine de Caraman-Chimay (1894–1965), daughter of Prince Pierre de Riquet de Caraman-Chimay. Their son Anne-Pierre married firstly
Works
- C. F. Meyer, sa vie, son œuvre (1825–1898), 1913
- Souvenirs de captivité et d'évasions 1915–1918, 1922
- La Jeunesse de Schiller, 1928
- L'Éducation sentimentale de Goethe, 1931
- Goethe et l'Art de vivre, 1935
- L'Évangile de la force, le visage de la jeunesse du IIIe Reich, 1936
- Catholiques d'Allemagne, 1938
- Le Nazisme peint par lui-même, 1946
- Les Allemands d'aujourd'hui, 1948
- La Religion de Goethe, 1949
- Visage de l'Allemagne actuelle, 1950
- Konrad Adenauer, 1955
- L'Allemagne d'Adenauer, 1958
- L'Allemagne et l'Europe, Allemagne européenne, 1960
- L'Allemagne, d'Adenauer à Erhard, 1964
References
- ^ a b c academie-francaise Biography
- ^ "JONES sir George Roderick otherwise Sir Roderick K.B.E". in Probate Index for 1962, at probatesearch.service.gov.uk, accessed 15 April 2020