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Jean Louis de Boubers

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Other names
  
Boubers the Younger

Name
  
Jean-Louis Boubers

Nationality
  
France

Citizenship
  
Belgium


Jean-Louis de Boubers

Native name
  
Jean-Louis de Boubers de Corbeville

Born
  
June 18, 1731 Lille (France) (
1731-06-18
)

Residence
  
Lille, Dunkerque, Liege, Brussels

Fields
  
Printer, publisher and bookseller

Died
  
July 30, 1804, Brussels, Belgium

Institution
  
Dunkirk, Liege, Brussels

Jean-Louis de Boubers de Corbeville sometimes named Boubers the Younger (18 June 1731 – 30 July 1804) was a French then Belgian printer, publisher and bookseller. He was also characters founder, music publisher and paper producer. He became royal printer for the Royal Academy of Science, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium in Brussels.

Biography

Jean-Louis de Boubers, born in Lille, was the son of Henri-Louis de Boubers de Corbeville, Captain in the Maillé Infantry Regiment and of Marie-Catherine Gavois. He was the brother of Claude-René-Denis de Boubers, named Denis de Boubers, "one of the most remarkable typographer of France", and of Henri-François de Boubers, printer.

Son-in-law in first marriage (1752) of Louis-François Barbier, bookseller in Arras, his second wife (1759) was the daughter of the Lille bookseller André-Joseph Panckoucke. He entered the selected circle of the founder of the eighteenth century first press empire created by Charles-Joseph Panckoucke and Henri Agasse de Cresne (fr). This northern French tradition will continue through Jean Prouvost (fr), founder of the press group Paris Match and Marie Claire.

Printer and bookseller in Dunkerque in 1748, there is strong evidence to indicate that he got another address registration in Liège. "Liège was actually a duty-free country where printing was developing in the eighteenth century because of equally free counterfeiting practices." In 1759, Jean-Louis de Boubers had allegedly been involved in the conflict between Pierre Rousseau (fr) and Liege authorities: he was ordered "to migrate from the city within three times twenty four hours". In 1760, he wished to go to Lille to replace Charles-Joseph Panckoucke but was blocked by the town councillor. However, in 1761, he obtained the Liege Bourgeois diploma.

Then he migrated to Brussels where he got authorization to establish as printer in 1768. Six years later he was responsible of the most prestigious editions of the Jean-Jacques Rousseau complete works in 12 volumes at a London address.

Granted the privilege of Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie bookseller, he published plays and opéras comiques performed from 1777 to 1799.

Freemason, he joined the Brussels Lodge Les Vrais Amis de la Justice. He printed the journal de Bruxelles. Jean-Louis de Boubers died in Brussels in 1804.

References

Jean-Louis de Boubers Wikipedia