The Encyclopedia
Christianity/Caesars
A number of Caesars (Julius, Augustus,
Tiberius, Claudius, Nero) ruled Rome before
Christianity, once a persecuted faith, became dominant in Rome.
catacombs/Rome
Jean-Jaques/Diogenes/Calvin/Socinius
Two philosophers: Jean-Jaques Rousseau
and Diogenes. Two (three?) refomers
of the Protestant faith: John Calvin (1509-1564), and either Faustus Socinus
(1539-1604) or Laelius Socinus (1525-1562) (two members of the same family
who worked on the reformation and founded the Socinianism doctrine).
John Huss/Luther/Descartes/Voltaire/Condorcet/Robespierre/Marat/Babeuf
John Huss (or Hus) (1370(?)-1415) reformer of the Church, predating
the Reformation in the 16th century; he was executed as a heretic, which
set off the Hussite wars in Bohemia. Martin Luther (1483-1546), who published
his Ninety-Five Theses, and initiated the Protestant Reformation. Rene
Descartes (1596-1650), philosopher ("cogito ergo sum"--"I think;
therefore, I am" (Lat.)) and mathematician (primarily analytical geometry,
Cartesian coordinates), who placed emphasis on rational thought. Voltaire
(pen name of Francois Marie Arouet) (1694-1778), author and philosopher,
imprisoned then exiled from France for much of his life for his criticism
of the government and the church. Condorcet.
Robespierre.
Jean Paul Marat (1743-1793), French revolutionary, elected to the Convention
Aug. 1792(?); stabbed to death in his bath. Francois Noel Babeuf (1760-1797),
another French revolutionary; proposed common ownership of all property
and land (see also).
Saint-Simon/Owen/Fourier
Various socialists. "Owen" probably refers to Robert Owen, but which
one?
le troisieme dessous
(Fr.) The "third lower floor" mentioned at the beginning of the chapter.
Inferi
Those down below; the dead.
Ugolino
My best guess is Count Ugolino; in the thirteenth century, he was (along
with his children) imprisoned in the Tower of Pisa for treason, to die
of starvation. One of the damned souls in the ninth circle of Hell described
in Dante Alighieri's Inferno; also depicted in Geoffrey Chaucer's
"The Monk's Tale," one of the Canterbury Tales.
Lacenaire
Babeuf/Cartouche/Marat/Schinderhannes
Babeuf. Cartouche, the 18-century French Robin
Hood (a French film titled "Cartouche" exists about him, made in 1963).
Marat.
Schinderhannes, the German robber-hero (a la Robin Hood) of the
Rhine.
Hercules
Or Herackles. Mythological Greek hero, son of
the king of the Greek gods, Zeus, and the mortal woman Alcemene. Reknowned
for his great physical strength and for his completion of the twelve monumental
labours imposed on him by the king Eurystheus.
Farnese Hercules
Sculpture
of Hercules (see above) created 4th century B.C. by the Roman artist Glykon,
based on an original by Lysippos (or one of his pupils). Glykon's statue
is in the Farnese Palace at Rome; a copy is in the gardens of the Tuileries
in Paris.
Arche-Marion
Thirteenth-century Parisian street which runs
down to the River Seine through an arch (l'Arch-Marion). Became rue des
Bourdonnais in 1852.
Marshal Brune/"Avignon in 1815"
Guillaume Marie Anne Brune (1763-1815), general
and marshal of France under Napoleon. He was murdered by royalists in Avignon
in 1815.
Saint-Mihiel
Small town in Lorraine, France, on the Meuse
River.
Cain/Abel
Biblical: Book of Genesis. The sons of Adam and
Eve. Cain, jealous that God accepted Abel's offering (a lamb) and not his
(fruits of the earth), killed Abel and was afterwards sentenced by God
to roam the land.
Proteus
In Greek mythology, Proteus is the herdsman of Poseidon's (or Neptune's,
in Roman mythology) sea-calves, and also a prophet. He has the power to
change himself into any form he wishes.
Vidocq
Eugène François Vidocq, 18th-century French detective,
founder of the Surete (the French police organization). (Side note: today,
there exists a crime-solving organization
named after him.)
Coco-Latour
the Seine
The river that divides Paris into the Rive Gauche (Left (following
the flow of the river) Bank) and Rive Droite (Right Bank).
the Salpetriere
Salpetriere
President of the Assizes/Lacenaire
Montmatre or Montrouge
Horace/"Ambubaiarum collegia, pharmacopolae, mendici, mimae"
Horace. The quote appears in his
Sermonum
Liber I. (Translation?)