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Gabriel Compayré

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Education
  
Lycée Louis-le-Grand

Occupation
  
Scholar, politician

Born
  
January 2, 1843
Albi, France

Died
  
23 March 1913, Paris, France

Alma mater
  
École normale supérieure de lettres et sciences humaines

Books
  
History Of Pedagogy, Jean Jacques Roussea, The Intellectual and Mora, Development of the Child in Later In, Abelard and the Origin an

Gabriel Compayré was a French scholar of pedagogy and politician.

Contents

Early life

Gabriel Compayré was born on January 2, 1843 in Albi, France.

Compayré was educated at the Lycée Louis-le-Grand. He graduated from the École normale supérieure de lettres et sciences humaines and passed the Agrégation in philosophy in 1866. He received a doctorate in philosophy in 1873, with a thesis about David Hume.

Career

Compayré taught high school philosophy in Pau, Poitiers and Toulouse. He taught philosophy at the University of Toulouse. He was the author of many books on pedagogy. He also wrote books about Peter Abelard and Herbert Spencer. Some of his books were translated into English by William H. Payne.

Compayré served in the National Assembly from 1881 to 1889, serving as deputy to Lavaur. He lost his reelection bid to Charles Poulié in 1889.

Compayré was a Commander of the Legion of Honour.

Publications

  • Histoire critique des doctrines de l’éducation en France (1879)
  • Éléments d’éducation civique (1881), a work placed on the index at Rome, but very widely read in the primary schools of France
  • Cours de pédagogie théorique et pratique (1885, 13th ed., 1897)
  • The Intellectual and Moral Development of the Child, in English (2 vols., New York, 1896–1902)
  • A series of monographs on Les Grands Éducateurs.
  • Death

    Compayré died on March 23, 1913 in Paris, France.

    References

    Gabriel Compayré Wikipedia