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Diane de Guldencrone

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Diane de Guldencrone (née Gobineau; 13 September 1848 – 1930) was a French historian.

Biography

Diane Marguerite Gabrielle Victoire Clémence de Gobineau[1] was born in Paris, the eldest daughter of diplomat, politician and writer Arthur de Gobineau (1816–1882) and Clémence Monnerot (1816–1911).

In 1866, she married Danish baron Ode of Güldencrone[2] (1840–1880) in Athens, Greece. Baron Güldencrone was a marine officier and aide-de-camp to King George I of Greece.[3] The couple had five children: Wilhelm (1867–1878), Arthur (1869–1895), Clémence (1872–1891), Christian (1874–1875) and Marie (1876-1890), who all died before their mother.[4][5]

Diane de Guldencrone wrote two books: one about the history of Medieval Greece (spanning from the creation of the Principality of Achaea in 1205 to the siege of Athens by the Turks in 1456), and one about the history of Byzantine Italy. She died in Rome.

Works

  • L'Achaïe féodale : étude sur le Moyen Âge en Grèce (1205-1456) (in French). Paris: Ernest Leroux. 1886.
  • L'Italie byzantine : étude sur le haut Moyen Âge (400-1050) (in French). Paris: Ernest Leroux. 1914.

References

  1. ^ Études gobiniennes (in French). Paris: Klincksieck. 1966. p. 95.
  2. ^ or Güldencrone, Gyldenkrone
  3. ^ Donnard, Jean-Hervé (1967). Gobineau à Athènes, 1864–1868 : exposition commémorative (in French). Institut français d'Athènes.
  4. ^ "Ove baron Gyldenkrone". finnholbek.dk (in Danish).
  5. ^ Boissel, Jean (1974). Gobineau, l'Orient et l'Iran : 1816-1860. Prolégomènes et essai d'analyse (in French). Paris: Klincksieck. p. 80.

Further reading

  • Autres fragments inédits des Souvenirs de Diane de Guldencrone. Études gobiniennes (in French). M.-L. Concasty and A. B. Duff. 1968–1969. pp. 11–102.