Gatien de Courtilz de
Sandras (1644, Montargis
, Loiret
– 1712) was
a French
novelist,
journalist, pamphleteer and memorialist.
His abundant output includes short stories, gallant letters, tales
of historical love affairs—such as
Les Intrigues amoureuses de
la Cour de France (1684)—historical and political works,
biographies and semi-fictional "memoirs" (in the first person; his
prefaces often indicate that the works were composed from papers
found after the subject's death) of historical figures from the
recent past (such as the Marquis de Montbrun and M. de Rochefort).
His memoir-novels—such as "Mémoires de M.L.C.D.R." (1687),
"Mémoires de M. d'Artagnan" (1700), "Mémoires de M. de B."
(1711)—describe the social and political world of
Richelieu and
Mazarin with a picaresque realism (spies,
kidnappings, and political machinations predominate) and they were
important precursors to both French picaresque novels and literary
realism in the 18th century.
Courtilz de Sandras is best known today for his semi-fictionalized
memoirs of the famous
musketeer d'Artagnan which were published in 1700 (27 years
after the death of d'Artagnan) and which served as the model for
Alexandre Dumas, père's
portrayal of d'Artagnan in the
The Three Musketeers (Fr:
Les
trois mousquetaires),
Twenty
Years After (Fr:
Vingt ans après) and
The Vicomte de
Bragelonne (Fr:
Le Vicomte de Bragelonne ou Dix ans
plus tard).
Courtilz de Sandras served in the army before becoming a writer.
He was
imprisoned several times in the Bastille
where
Besmaux, the former companion of d’Artagnan, was warden and it was
most likely from this source that he learned the details of
d'Artagnan's life.
References
- Portions of this article are based on the equivalent article from
the French Wikipedia, consulted in
February 2006.
- Dandrey, Patrick, ed. Dictionnaire des lettres françaises -
Le XVIIe siècle. Paris: Fayard, 1996, pp. 344-346. ISBN
2-253-05664-2