Gustave Saige
Born Gustave, Marie, Joseph, Jules Saige
20 August 1838Died 5 December 1905 (1905-12-06 ) (aged 67) Alma mater École Nationale des Chartes Occupation Archivist
Gustave Saige (1838–1905) was a French archivist. He was the archivist of the Prince's Palace of Monaco from 1881 to 1905.
Gustave Saige was born on 20 August 1838 in Paris , France.[ 1] He graduated from the École Nationale des Chartes in 1862, where his classmates included Paul Viollet and Gaston Paris .[ 2]
Saige served as the archivist of the Prince's Palace of Monaco from 1881 to 1905.[ 1] [ 3] It was Saige who discovered that the House of Grimaldi descended from Otto Canella , not Grimaldi I, Lord of Antibes .[ 3] However, his research was not published under the reign of Charles III, Prince of Monaco .[ 3] When Albert I, Prince of Monaco came to power in 1889, Saige was able to publish it.[ 3] By 1895, the Almanach de Gotha had updated its entry on the House of Grimaldi with Otto Canella as its founder.[ 3]
Additionally, Saige was a member of the Council of State.[ 1] He was a correspondent to the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres .[ 1]
Saige was the author of many books about the Languedoc and Monaco. His Les Juifs du Languedoc antérieurement au XIVe siècle is a "classic archival [study] of Jewish life in Languedoc" prior to the 14th century.[ 4] Additionally, Saige intended to work on the history of Jews in Toulouse , but he died before he was able to write about it.[ 5]
Saige was a Knight of the Legion of Honour and Grand Officer of the Order of Saint-Charles .[ 2]
Saige was married.[ 5]
Saige died on 5 December 1905 in Monaco.[ 1] [ 2] He was sixty-seven years old.[ 2] After his death, he was succeeded as the archivist of the Prince's Palace of Monaco by Léon-Honoré Labande .
Une Alliance défensive entre propriétaires allodiaux au XIIe siècle (Paris: A. Franck, 1861).
Les Juifs du Languedoc antérieurement au XIVe siècle (Paris: Alphonse Picard, 1881).
Honoré II et le palais de Monaco (Monaco: Imprimerie du Journal de Monaco, 1883).
Les beaux-arts au Palais de Monaco avant la révolution: I. Les princes et le palais depuis le seizième siècle (Monaco: Imprimerie de Monaco, 1884).
Les Archives du palais de Monaco et l'intérêt de ses collections pour l'histoire de France (Orléans: Imprimerie de P. Girardot, 1888).
Documents historiques relatifs à la Principauté de Monaco (Monaco, 1888-1889).
Abrégé de l'histoire de Monaco à l'usage des écoles de la principauté (Monaco : Imprimerie de Monaco, 1894).
La seigneurie de Monaco au milieu du xvie siécle (Monaco: Imprimerie de Monaco, 1896).
Monaco, ses origines et son histoire (Monaco: Imprimerie de Monaco, 1897).
Glanes d'archives. Les Grimaldi chez eux et en voyage (Monaco, 1906).François-Nicolas Baudot, sieur du Buisson et d'Aubenay, Journal des guerres civiles de 1648-1652 (edited by Gustave Saige, 2 volumes, Chez H. Champion, 1883-1885).
^ a b c d e "Gustave Saige (1838-1905)" . Bibliothèque nationale de France . Retrieved December 22, 2015 .
^ a b c d Moris, Henri (1905). "Gustave Saige" . Bibliothèque de l'école des chartes . 66 (1): 742–745. Retrieved December 22, 2015 .
^ a b c d e Fouilleron, Thomas (2013). "Français par le livre. Les princes de Monaco et l'incroyable longévité d'une généalogie fabuleuse (XVIIe-XIXe siècle)" . Revue historique . 3 (667): 601–636. doi :10.3917/rhis.133.0601 . Retrieved December 22, 2015 – via Cairn.info .
^ Fontaine, Resianne (2011). Studies in the History of Culture and Science: A Tribute to Gad Freudenthal . Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill Publishers . p. 285. ISBN 9789004191235 . OCLC 729743875 . Retrieved December 22, 2015 .
^ a b Mundy, John Hine (2006). Studies in the Ecclesiastical and Social History of Toulouse in the Age of the Cathars . Aldershot, England: Ashgate Publishing. p. 5. ISBN 9780754653165 . OCLC 57549454 . Retrieved December 22, 2015 .
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