Maturin Veyssière of Croze


Maturin Veyssière de la Croze (born December 4, 1661 in Nantes, May 21, 1739 in Berlin) is a French scholar, royal librarian in Prussia, member of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences founded in 1700. He was a erudite and polyglot. In earlier life he was a Catholic scholar, Benedictine. Under the influence of Jansenism, he left the Catholic Church. He preached that he was a non-denominational Christian, not belonging to any of the churches, to any of the existing religious communities. He led the study of Scripture. He was a propagator of the stoic attitude in life, and as a moral model he put one of the most famous stoic of all time, Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius. He became acquainted with such well-known intellectual elites of his age as Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Pierre Bayle. He was the champion of Duhan de Jandun - educator Frederick the Great. Duhan passed on to the future Prussian king the teachings he had received from his teacher, and Frederick the Great also highly valued Stoic values ​​and the figure of Mark Aurelius in his adult life. Bibliography

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