Amaury de Riencourt | |
---|---|
Born | Orléans, France | 12 June 1918
Died | 13 January 2005 Bellevue, Switzerland | (aged 86)
Academic background | |
Alma mater | College of Sorbonne University of Algiers |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Southeast Asian studies, South Asian studies, American studies, Tibetan studies, Chinese studies |
Notable works | The Coming Caesars, The American Empire; Lost World: Tibet; The Eye of Shiva; The Soul of China; The Soul of India; Woman and Power in History; Sex and Power in History; Roof of the World: Tibet; A Child of the Century |
Amaury de Riencourt (born 12 June 1918 in Orléans, France; died 13 January 2005 at Bellevue, Switzerland)[1] was a writer and historian. He was an expert on Southeast Asia, an Indian scholar, a Sinologist, a Tibetologist, and an Americanist.[2][3]
De Riencourt's magnum opus was probably The Coming Caesars (1957), which explores the ethnic and ideological roots of America, Europe, and Russia, also comparing classical times with the contemporary world (i.e., the 19th–20th centuries).[citation needed]
Amaury de Riencourt was born in Orléans into a family of the French nobility that dates back at least to the 12th century.[2] He graduated from the Sorbonne in Paris and held a Master's degree from the University of Algiers.[4]
From 1939 to 1940, during the earlier part of the Second World War, de Riencourt served in the French Navy.[citation needed]
In 1947, de Riencourt visited Tibet, staying in Lhasa, where he remained for five months.[5] He met the Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, then just 12 years old, who declared that the country was governed in all areas as an independent nation, adding that the orders of his government were obeyed across the country.[6]
De Riencourt wrote a number of books (all in English), including: