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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