Jean-Marie Chopin
Jean-Marie Chopin (Russian: Иван Шопен; born in 1796 in Saint Petersburg, died February 15, 1871 in Paris) was a French-Russian explorer of the Caucasus. Son of a French sculptor and employed by Catherine II of Russia, Chopin began his career as secretary and librarian to Prince Alexander Kurakin, Russian ambassador to France. In 1812 Chopin and Kourakin returned to Russia; after the death of his patron in 1818 Chopin settled in Paris.
Chopin wrote "l'Histoire de Russie", "des Révolutions des Peuples du Nord", "Histoire des Provinces Danubiennes","Histoire du Dannemark", "Histoire du Roi de Rome". Chopin is known for his 1826 translation of The Fountain of Bakhchisaray by Alexander Pushkin (La Fontaine des Pleurs in French). The book was illustrated by his brother; the music for "Tartar sing" by the translator's wife was printed on the supplementary sheet. In Russia, this is the rarest publication of the Poushkine's work published when he was alive.
- Articles lacking sources from December 2006
- French explorers
- Russian–French translators
- Russian writers in French
- 1796 births
- 1871 deaths
- Writers from Paris
- People from Saint Petersburg
- French male non-fiction writers
- 19th-century translators
- 19th-century French male writers
- Russian people stubs
- Explorer stubs
- French translator stubs