Camille Jullian
Camille Jullian was a French historian, philologist, archaeologist and historian of literature.
A Professor of ancient history and classics at the University of Bordeaux from 1891, Jullian was awarded a chair at the Collège de France in 1905, where he taught national antiquities until 1930. He was made Grand Officier de la Légion d'Honneur in 1926, and was elected to the Académie française in 1924.
Jullian is the author of a monumental Histoire de la Gaule, published in eight volumes between 1907 and 1928, which has influenced Celtic studies throughout the 20th century.
Biography
Camille Louis Jullian was born on 15 March 1859 in Marseille, the son of Camille Jullian, a merchant and banker, and Marie Rouvière. Jullian came from a Protestant family of farmers originally from Calvisson, Gard. He attended the lycée of Marseille between 1864 and 1877, then the École Normale Supérieure, where he earned an agrégation in history and geography in 1880. Jullian was a member of the École française de Rome between 1880 and 1882. He became Doctor in Literature in March 1884.Jullian taught ancient history and classics at the University of Bordeaux between 1883 and 1905, becoming Professor in 1891, then was elected to the Collège de France in 1905, where he taught national antiquities until 1930. Jullian became a member of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres in 1908, was made Grand Officier de la Légion d'Honneur in 1926, and was elected to the Académie Française in 1924.Jullian was involved with the controversy over the archaeological findings of the Glozel artifacts in France. He adopted an intermediate position, arguing that some, but not all, of the discovered objects were authentic and dated to the Gallo-Roman period rather than the Neolithic.
He died on 12 December 1933 in the 6th arrondissement of Paris. His body is interred at the Protestant cemetery in Bordeaux.
Personal life
Jullian was a Protestant. He held liberal and patriotic views.In April 1890, Jullian married Jeanne Azam, the daughter of Étienne Azam, Professor of Medicine, and Anne Rolland. They had a daughter named Suzanne. The latter married a man named Simounet, a war veteran who ended his life in poverty; their son, the author Philippe Jullian, took instead his grandfather's name.
Works
On Bordeaux and Gironde
Étude d'épigraphie bordelaise. Les Bordelais dans l'armée romaine. Notes concernant les inscriptions de Bordeaux extraites des papiers de M. de Lamontagne, 1884Les antiquités de Bordeaux, 1885Inscriptions romaines de Bordeaux, 1887-1890 , Histoire de Bordeaux depuis les origines jusqu'en 1895, 1895*
Works on Gauls
De protectoribus et domesticis augustorum, 1883Histoire des institutions politiques de l'ancienne France, de Fustel de Coulanges, 1890Gallia, tableau sommaire de la Gaule sous la domination romaine, Hachette, 1892Fréjus romain, 1886Notes d'épigraphie, 1886Les transformations politiques de l'Italie sous les empereurs romains, 43 av JC-330 après J.-C., 1884Extraits des historiens du XIXe, publiés, annotés et précédés d'une introduction sur l'histoire de France, 1897Inscriptiones Galliae narbonensis Latinae , en collaboration, 1899La politique romaine en Provence , 1901Recherches sur la religion gauloise, 1903Plaidoyer pour la préhistoire, 1907Les anciens dieux de l'Occident, 1913Les Paris des Romains. Les Arènes. Les Thermes, 1924Histoire de la Gaule, rééd. Hachette, Coll. Références, 1993, 1270 pages, Au seuil de notre histoire. Leçons faites au Collège de France, 1905–1930, 3 vol. 1930-1931*