The story of Marie-Angélique's life in the wild was publicised in the mid-18th century in both France and
Britain through a short pamphlet biography of her by the French writer
Marie-Catherine Homassel Hecquet edited by the French scientist-explorer
Charles-Marie de la Condamine and published in Paris in 1755. This appeared in an English translation in 1768 as
An Account of a Savage Girl, Caught Wild in the Woods of Champagne. However, it was not error free, as it gave Marie-Angélique's age at the time of her capture as ten, although it is now speculated to have been nineteen. Interviews with Marie-Angélique herself were recorded by the French royal courtier and diarist Charles-Philippe d’Albert,
Duc de Luynes (1753), the French poet
Louis Racine (
c. 1755) and the Scottish philosopher-judge
James Burnett, Lord Monboddo (1765). In addition, accounts of her were published by the French naturalists
Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon (1759) and
Jacques-Christophe Valmont de Bomare (1768),
Lord Monboddo (1768) (1773) and (1795), the Châlons lawyer-antiquary
Claude-Rémy Buirette de Verrières (1788) and the French historian
Abel Hugo (1835). ==Marie-Catherine Homassel Hecquet==