Early years , Brillat-Savarin's birthplace ( photograph)|thumb|upright=1.25|alt=street scene of small provincial city in France Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin was born on 2 April 1755 in the small cathedral city of
Belley,
Ain, 80 kilometres (50 miles) east of
Lyon and a similar distance south of
Bourg-en-Bresse. Belley was the principal city of the region of
Bugey, which had been absorbed into France under the 1601
Treaty of Lyon. In the household and region in which Brillat-Savarin grew up, good food was taken seriously; his relation and fellow lawyer wrote: Brillat-Savarin learned from friends and acquaintances of his parents many unusual things about food, including a three-day method of cooking spinach, how to eat small game birds like
ortolans, and how to prepare chocolate for drinking. His formal education proceeded along more conventional lines: he entered the Collège de Belley in 1764 or 1765. Although founded as a religious institution and with many of its staff in holy orders, the college was secular in outlook; theology was not in the curriculum and the library contained works on agriculture and science as well as books by
La Rochefoucauld,
Montesquieu,
Rabelais,
Voltaire and
Rousseau. As a schoolboy Brillat-Savarin took up the violin; he loved playing it, and although destined for the law he hankered for a while after a career as a violinist. In the spring of 1774 Brillat-Savarin enrolled at the
University of Dijon. His main study was law, but he undertook some extracurricular studies in medicine and attended lectures in chemistry by
Louis-Bernard Guyton de Morveau, who became a friend and helpful counsellor.
Ancien Régime and revolution , 1789|thumb|upright=1.25|alt=indoor scene: a huge palatial room with numerous attendees seated After graduating in 1778 Brillat-Savarin returned to Belley and practised law, making his first court appearance in September. He made good progress in his profession, and in 1781 he was appointed as a magistrate in the local civil court –
lieutenant civil du bailliage. As he became more eminent locally he became involved with seeking action to alleviate the deprivations of the poor caused by years of financial crisis and poor harvests. In 1787 he first visited the royal residence, the
Château de Versailles; his purpose may have been to seek help for the poor of his region, but he left no details of his mission. Riots broke out in
Grenoble in June 1788 in protest against the abolition of traditional and supposedly guaranteed local freedoms, and it became clear that effective government had so seriously collapsed that
Louis XVI would have to summon a meeting of the
Estates General, the closest approximation in Ancien Régime France to a national parliament; it had not met since 1614, and in the words of the historian Karen Diane Haywood it "generally met only in dire situations when the king and his ministers had no other choice". When the King summoned the Estates General in 1789 Brillat-Savarin was elected to represent the
Third Estate of Belley. In a biographical sketch Anne Drayton observes "there was nothing of the revolutionary in his make-up", and when the Estates General reformed as the
National Constituent Assembly he made speeches opposing the division of France into eighty-three administrative
departments, the introduction of
trial by jury and the abolition of capital punishment. At the end of his term of office in September 1791 Brillat-Savarin returned home as president of the civil tribunal of the new department of
Ain, but as politics in Paris became increasingly radical, with the abolition of the monarchy, he was
persona non grata with the new regime, and was dismissed from his post for royalist sympathies. Such was his popularity among his fellow citizens that in December 1792 he was elected mayor of Belley. He later stayed with relations in
Moudon, from whom he learnt his celebrated and later controversial recipe for
fondue. He was joined by a fellow exile, Jean-Antoine de Rostaing, whose father, the Marquis Just-Antoine de Rostaing, had fought with the French forces in the
American War of Independence. Rostaing suggested sailing to the United States; Brillat-Savarin agreed. They made their way to
Rotterdam, where they took ship for an eighty-day voyage to
Manhattan, disembarking on 30 September 1794.
American exile , New York, where Brillat-Savarin earned a living as a violinist|alt=interior of old theatre, looking at the stage over the heads of a full audience Brillat-Savarin remained in the US for nearly two years, supporting himself by giving French and violin lessons. His biographer Giles MacDonogh observes, "He awarded himself the title of
Professeur, by which he jocularly referred to himself to the end of his days". He also played first violin in America's only professional orchestra, at the
John Street Theatre, New York. One of his favourite memories of his American stay was an evening at Little's Tavern in New York when he and two other French
émigrés beat two Englishmen in a competitive drinking bout, in which they all consumed large quantities of
claret,
port,
Madeira and
punch.
Return to France Rostaing grew tired of life in the US and returned to France in May 1795. Without him Brillat-Savarin was deprived of the closest friend of his years of exile. He continued to amuse himself with, among other diversions, what a biographer calls "undoubtedly numerous" encounters with the opposite sex; Brillat-Savarin commented, "being able to speak the language and flirt with women, I was able to reap the richest rewards". He hoped, nonetheless, to return to France, not least because he was running short of funds, and he sailed for home, arriving at the end of August 1796. By this time the political scene in France was no longer dominated by extremists:
Robespierre and his allies from the Reign of Terror had fallen and France was ruled by the more moderate
Directory. Brillat-Savarin persuaded the authorities that the legal penalties imposed on
émigrés should be rescinded in his case. After the end of the Rhine campaign the Directory appointed him as President of the Criminal Court of the Ain Department, based in Bourg-en-Bresse, in 1798, and then State Prosecutor for the Department of
Seine-et-Oise, based in Versailles. After
Napoleon Bonaparte engineered the fall of the Directory and establishment of the
Consulate in 1799, Brillat-Savarin was appointed as a judge in the
Tribunal de cassation, the supreme court of appeal, which sat in Paris. He was awarded the
Legion of Honour in 1804, and in 1808 Napoleon made him a ''
Chevalier de l'Empire''.
Later years For the rest of his life Brillat-Savarin led a contented existence, carrying out his judicial functions conscientiously, entertaining his friends, and writing. He remained a lifelong bachelor. Playing the violin continued to be a favourite pastime – by this time he could afford a
Stradivarius – and although he never played professionally again he performed for his friends. On 2 February 1826, at the age of seventy, Brillat-Savarin died in Paris having attended a service in the
Basilica of Saint-Denis while already having a cold, which turned to
pneumonia. ==Works==