Pierre Quillard | |
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Born | [1] Paris, France | 14 July 1864
Died | 4 February 1912 Neuilly-sur-Seine, France[2] | (aged 47)
Pierre Quillard (14 July 1864 – 4 February 1912) was a French symbolist poet, playwright, literary critic, philosopher, Hellenist translator, and journalist. As a thinker and anarchist activist, he stood as one of the early proponents of the Armenophile movement in France, notably through his bimonthly publication, Pro Armenia. Later on, he fervently joined the defense of Dreyfus and is regarded as one of the most accomplished intellectuals among the Dreyfusards, testifying on behalf of Émile Zola during his trial.
Within the scope of his aesthetic and political reflections, he advocated for using literature as a revolutionary weapon and sought to delineate a "poetics of the terror attack."
Playing a coordinating role between French anarchists and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF), Pierre Quillard also served as a witness and compiler of historical sources regarding the Hamidian massacres, a series of atrocities carried out by the Ottoman Empire under Abdul Hamid II. A founding member of the League of Human Rights, he played a central role during its initial period and became its secretary-general in 1911, shortly before his death. He also defended other persecuted groups, such as the colonized inhabitants of the Congo and the Jews of Eastern Europe.
Despite being a significant figure of his generation, he gradually faded into obscurity.