Guizot was born at
Nîmes to a
bourgeois Protestant family. On 8 April 1794, when François Guizot was 6, his father was executed on the
scaffold at Nîmes during the
Reign of Terror. From then on, the boy's mother was completely responsible for his upbringing. Driven from Nîmes by the
Revolution, Madame Guizot and her son went to
Geneva, where he was educated. In spite of her decided
Calvinistic opinions, the theories of
Jean-Jacques Rousseau influenced Madame Guizot. A strong
Liberal, she even adopted the notion inculcated in
Emile that every man ought to learn a manual trade or craft. Guizot learnt carpentry, and succeeded in making a table with his own hands, which is still preserved. In 1805, he arrived in Paris and he entered at the age eighteen as tutor into the family of M. Stapfer, formerly
Swiss minister in France. He soon began to write in a journal edited by
Jean-Baptiste-Antoine Suard, the
Publiciste. This connection introduced him to the literary society of
Paris. In October 1809, aged twenty-two, he wrote a series review of
François-René de Chateaubriand's
Martyrs, which won Chateaubriand's approbation and thanks, and he continued to contribute largely to the periodical press. At Suard's he had made the acquaintance of
Pauline de Meulan (born 2 November 1773), a contributor to Suard's journal. Her contributions were interrupted by illness, but immediately resumed and continued by an unknown hand. It was discovered that François Guizot had substituted for her. In 1812 Mademoiselle de Meulan married Guizot. She died in 1827. (An only son, François, born in 1819, died in 1837 of consumption.) In 1828 Guizot married Elisa Dillon, niece of his first wife, and also an author. She died in 1833, leaving two daughters,
Henriette (1829–1908), a co-author with her father and prolific writer herself, and Pauline (1831–1874) and a son,
Guillaume (1833–1892), who attained some reputation as a scholar and writer. François Guizot and historian
François Mignet invented the concept of the
bourgeois revolution. On 15 June 1837, Guizot sat next to the Princess Lieven at a dinner given by the Duc de Broglie. After twenty years as Russian Ambassadress to London, she had separated from her husband and sought refuge in Paris, where from 1835 she had held an increasingly influential salon occasionally attended by Guizot. She had sympathised with him over his son's death earlier in 1837. From 15 June, they formed a close and loving friendship, exchanging over 5000 letters. He was present at her death in Paris in 1856. Her role in supporting and influencing his aims in aristocratic, political and diplomatic circles was considerable, aided by her retaining many contacts in England and her brother being Chief of Secret Police in Russia and a confidant of the Tsar. During the
First French Empire, Guizot, entirely devoted to literary pursuits, published a collection of French
synonyms (1809), an essay on the fine arts (1811), and a translation of
Edward Gibbon's
The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, with additional notes, in 1812. These works recommended him to the notice of
Louis-Marcelin de Fontanes, grand-master of the
University of France, who selected Guizot for the chair of modern history at the
Sorbonne in 1812. He delivered his first lecture (reprinted in his
Memoirs) on 11 December of that year. He omitted the customary compliment to the all-powerful emperor, in spite of the hints given him by his patron, but the course which followed marks the beginning of the great revival of historical research in France in the 19th century. He had now acquired a considerable position in Paris society, and the friendship of
Royer-Collard and leading members of the liberal party, including the young
duc de Broglie. Absent from Paris at the moment of the fall of Napoleon in 1814, he was at once selected, on the recommendation of Royer-Collard, to serve the government of King
Louis XVIII, in the capacity of secretary-general of the ministry of the interior, under the abbé de Montesquiou. Upon the return of
Napoleon from
Elba he immediately resigned, on 25 March 1815, and returned to his literary pursuits. =="The Man of Ghent"==