Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Georges Vacher de Lapouge

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
French

Spouse
  
Marie-Albertine Hindre

Name
  
Georges de


Georges Vacher de Lapouge Vacher de Lapouge socialistearyaniste franais qui

Born
  
12 December 1854 Neuville-de-Poitou, Vienne (
1854-12-12
)

Influences
  
Arthur de Gobineau, Herbert Spencer, Charles Darwin, Alphonse de Candolle, Ernst Haeckel, Francis Galton

Children
  
Claude Vacher de Lapouge

Died
  
February 20, 1936, Poitiers, France

Influenced
  
Otto Ammon, Madison Grant, Jon Alfred Mjoen, Eugen Duhring, Ludwig Woltmann

Influenced by
  
Arthur comte de Gobineau, Herbert Spencer

Count Georges Vacher de Lapouge (12 December 1854, in Neuville-de-Poitou – 20 February 1936, in Poitiers) was a French anthropologist and a theoretician of eugenics and racialism.

Contents

Georges Vacher de Lapouge 7 Poitiers Patrimoine Le Poitevin qui inspira Hitler

Biography

Georges Vacher de Lapouge Georges Vacher de Lapouge L39Aryen WAWA CONSPI Blog

While a young law student at the University of Poitiers, Vacher de Lapouge read Herbert Spencer and Charles Darwin. In 1879 he gained a doctorate degree in law and became a magistrate in Niort (Deux-Sèvres) and a prosecutor in Le Blanc. He then studied history and philology at the École pratique des hautes études, and learned several languages such as Akkadian, Egyptian, Hebrew, Chinese, and Japanese at the École du Louvre and at School of Anthropology in Paris from 1883 to 1886.

Georges Vacher de Lapouge wwwcontrecultureorgImagesVacherdeLapougejpg

From 1886 Vacher de Lapouge taught anthropology at the University of Montpellier, advocating Francis Galton's eugenic thesis, but was expelled in 1892 because of his socialist activities (he co-founded Jules Guesde's French Workers' Party and ran in 1888 for city mayor in the Montpellier municipal election). He worked later as a librarian at the University of Rennes until his retirement in 1922.

Work and legacy

He wrote L'Aryen: son Rôle Social (1899, "The Aryan: His Social Role"), in which he opposed the Aryan, dolichocephalic races to the brachycephalic races. Vacher de Lapouge thus classified human races: first the Homo europaeus, Nordic or fair-hair and Protestant, then the Homo alpinus, represented by the Auvergnat and the Turk, finally the Homo mediterraneus, figured by the Neapoletan or the Andaluz.

Georges Vacher de Lapouge Vacher de Lapouge

Vacher de Lapouge introduced Francis Galton's eugenics in France, but applied it to his theory of races. Vacher de Lapouge's ideas partly mirror those of Henri de Boulainvilliers (1658–1722), who believed that the Germanic Franks formed the upper class of French society, whereas the Gauls were the ancestors of the peasantry. Race, according to him, thus became a synonym of social class. But, in virtue of heredity, the Homo europaeus intrinsically possessed more qualities than the lower Homo mediterraneus. He added to this concept of races and classes what he termed selectionism, his version of Galton's eugenics. Vacher de Lapouge's "selectionism" had two aims: first, achieving the annihilation of trade unionists, considered as "degenerate"; second, creating types of man each destined to one end, in order to prevent any competition of labour conditions. His anthropology thus aimed at preventing social conflict by establishing a fixed, hierarchical social order.

In 1926, he prefaced and translated Madison Grant's Passing of the Great Race (Le Déclin de la Grande Race, Payot, 1926). He also translated one work of Ernst Haeckel into French.

Lapouge had a direct influence on Nazi racial and eugenic doctrine.

Publications

  • (1878). Essai Historique sur le Conseil Privé ou Conseil des Parties. Poitiers: Impr. de A. Dupré.
  • (1879). Du Patrimoine en Droit Romain et en Droit Français. Poitiers: Impr. de Marcireau et Cie.
  • (1879). Essais de Droit Positif Généralisé. Théorie du Patrimoine. Paris: Ernest Thorin.
  • (1885). Études sur la Nature et sur l'Évolution Historique du Droit de Succession. Paris: Ernest Thorin.
  • (1896). Les Sélections Sociales. Paris: A. Fontemoing ("Social Selections").
  • (1899). L'Aryen: Son Rôle Social. Paris: Albert Fontemoing ("The Aryan: his Social Role").
  • (1909). Race et Milieu Social: Essais d'Anthroposociologie. Paris: Marcel Rivière ("Race and Social Background: Essays of Anthroposociology").
  • Articles

  • (1886). "L'Hérédité," Revue d'Anthropologie 1, pp. 512–521.
  • (1887). "La Dépopulation de la France," Revue d'Anthropologie 2 (1), pp. 69–80.
  • (1887). "L'Anthropologie et la Science Politique," Revue d'Anthropologie 2 (2), pp. 136–157.
  • (1887). "Les Sélections Sociale," Revue d'Anthropologie 2 (5), pp. 519–550.
  • (1888). "De l'Inégalité Parmi les Hommes," Revue d'Anthropologie 3 (1), pp. 9–38.
  • (1888). "L´Hérédité dans la Science Politique," Revue d'Anthropologie 3 (2), pp. 169–181.
  • (1915). "Le Paradoxe Pangermaniste", Mercure de France, Tome 111, No. 416, pp. 640–654.
  • (1923). "Dies Irae: La Fin du Monde Civilise," Europe 9 (October 1): 59-61.
  • Works in English translation

  • (1905). "Natural Selection and Social Selection," in Sociology and Social Progress. Boston: Ginn & Company, pp. 647–653.
  • (1927). "Contribution to the Fundamentals of a Policy of Population," The Eugenics Review 19 (3), 192-7.
  • (1927). "The Numerous Families of Former Times," The Eugenics Review 19 (3), 198-202.
  • (1928). "Race Studies in Europe," Eugenical News 13 (6), 82-84.
  • (1928). "The Nordic Movement in Europe," Eugenical News 13 (10), 132-133.
  • (1929). "Thoughts of Count of Lapouge," Eugenical News 14 (6), 78-80.
  • (1930). "From Count de Lapouge," Eugenical News 15 (8), 116-117.
  • (1932). "Post-War Immigration into France," Eugenical News 17 (4), 94-95.
  • (1934). "A French View," Eugenical News 19 (2), 39-40.
  • References

    Georges Vacher de Lapouge Wikipedia