Emmanuel de Martonne
Emmanuel de Martonne, taken before 1929
Born (1873-04-01 ) 1 April 1873Died 24 July 1955(1955-07-24) (aged 82) Nationality French Occupation Geographer
Emmanuel de Martonne (French pronunciation: [ɛmanɥɛl də maʁtɔn] , 1 April 1873 – 24 July 1955) was a French geographer . He participated in the Paris Peace Conference .
Early life and education
Martonne was born on 1 April 1873 in Chabris , Indre , France,[ 1] and was the son-in-law of Paul Vidal de la Blache .[ 2] In 1892, he entered the École Normale Supérieure .[ 3] He graduated three years later with a degree in history and geography.[ 1] After that, he worked with Ferdinand von Richthofen and Albrecht Penck .[ 1]
Career
In 1899, de Martonne became a professor at the University of Rennes .
There he founded the institute of geography on the German model.
In October 1905 he moved to the University of Lyon, replaced at Rennes by Antoine Vacher .
Four years later he moved to the Sorbonne .
During World War I (1914–18), in January 1915 the Geographical Commission was established in close liaison with the 2nd Bureau of the Army Staff with six geographers, Albert Demangeon , Lucien Gallois , Emmanuel de Martonne, Emmanuel de Margerie , Louis Raveneau and Paul Vidal de La Blache .
During the Paris Peace Conference after the war, de Martonne was an adviser of Minister of Foreign Affairs André Tardieu and Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau .[ 8] He also lobbied for the return of Alsace-Lorraine to the French.[ 9] De Martonne was also secretary of the Comité D'études , which worked on fixing boundary issues following the war, especially in Romania and the Balkans .[ 8] [ 10] He was familiar with Central Europe and Romania, as he had conducted studies in the Southern Carpathians earlier in his life.[ 8]
After that, he taught at the University of Cluj in 1921.[ 11] He died on 24 July 1955 in Sceaux , a commune near Paris .[ 1]
Awards and honors
He became an honorary member of the Geographical Society of the USSR in 1933.,[ 12] and, from 1938 to 1952, was president of the International Geographical Union .[ 12] He was awarded the Cullum Geographical Medal in 1939, and the Victoria Medal in 1950.[ 1] [ 13] He became a member of the French Academy of Sciences in 1942.[ 12]
Publications
In 1909, he published the first edition of his book Traité de géographie physique: Climat, Hydrographie, Relief du sol, Biogéographie . It contains 396 three-dimensional , painstakingly researched illustrations and maps. It covers many aspects of geography, including different map projections , the geographic coordinate system , physical geography , climate , hydrography , erosion , glaciers , and biogeography .[ 14] [ 15] The second edition was published in 1913, and the third in 1920.
He published Les Alpes: Géographie générale , a study about the Alps , in 1926. This led to the "De Martonne aridity index".[ 16]
In his work Problème des régions arides Sud-Américaines De Martonne was the first to coin and the define the South American Arid Diagonal .[ 17]
References
^ a b c d e Smith, Charles H. (2005). "Martonne, Emmanuel-Louis-Eugène de (France 1873–1955)" . Retrieved 19 January 2013 .
^ British Academy (2003). Biographical Memoirs of Fellows . Oxford University Press . p. 202. ISBN 978-0-19-726302-0 . Retrieved 2 March 2013 .
^ Bowd, Gavin (13 May 2011). "Emmanuel de Martonne et la niassance de la grande Roumanie" (PDF) (in French). Romanian Journal of Geography. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2015-12-25. Retrieved 5 March 2013 .
^ a b c Palsky, Gilles (2002). "Emmanuel de Martonne and the Ethnographical Cartography of Central Europe (1917–1920)" (PDF) . Imago Mundi . 54 (1): 111– 119. doi :10.1080/03085690208592961 . ISSN 1479-7801 . OCLC 55939414 . S2CID 128511747 . Retrieved 19 January 2013 .
^ Flint, Colin (2004). The Geography of War and Peace: From Death Camps to Diplomats . Oxford University Press . p. 32. ISBN 978-0-19-534751-7 . Retrieved 5 March 2013 .
^ Maccaglia, Fabrizio; Morelle, Marie (29 November 2012). "Pour une géographie du droit: un chantier urbain" . Géocarrefour . ISSN 1627-4873 . Retrieved 5 March 2013 .
^ Livezeanu, Irina (2000). Cultural Politics in Greater Romania: Regionalism, Nation Building & Ethnic Struggle, 1918–1930 . Cornell University Press . p. 225. ISBN 978-0-8014-8688-3 . Retrieved 5 March 2013 .
^ a b c "Martonne, Emmanuel de" . Great Soviet Encyclopedia . The Free Dictionary. Retrieved 19 January 2013 .
^ "Timeline of the American Geographical Society" (PDF) . American Geographical Society . p. 14. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 2 March 2013 .
^ "Reviews". The Journal of Geology . 18 (4). University of Chicago Press : 387– 390. May–June 1910. JSTOR 30079349 . OCLC 818922761 .
^ Johnson, D. W. (1910). "Traite de Geographie physique". Bulletin of the American Geographical Society . 42 (7). American Geographical Society : 533– 535. doi :10.2307/199543 . JSTOR 199543 . OCLC 225227274 .
^ Oliver, John E. (2005). The Encyclopedia of World Climatology . Springer Publishing . p. 90. ISBN 978-1-4020-3264-6 . Retrieved 5 March 2013 .
^ Abraham, Elena María; Rodríguez, María Daniela; Rubio, María Clara; Guida-Johnson, Bárbara; Gomez, Laura; Rubio, Cecilia (2020-01-08). "Disentangling the concept of "South American Arid Diagonal" ". Journal of Arid Environments . 175 : 104089. Bibcode :2020JArEn.175j4089A . doi :10.1016/j.jaridenv.2019.104089 . S2CID 213655544 .
Sources
Brock, Numa; Giusti, Christian (February 2007), "Autour du Traité de Géographie physique d'Emmanuel de Martonne" , Géomorphologie (in French), 13 (2): 125– 144, doi :10.4000/geomorphologie.921 , ISSN 1957-777X , retrieved 5 March 2013
Ginsburger, Nicolas (30 November 2010), " La guerre, la plus terrible des érosions " Cultures de guerre et géographes universitaires Allemagne-France-Etats-Unis (1914–1921) (PDF) (thesis) (in French), Université Paris Ouest Nanterre-La Défense, archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-11-27, retrieved 2017-07-26
Lorimer, Hayden; Withers, Charles W. J. (2012-09-27), Geographers – Biobibliographical Studies , A&C Black, ISBN 978-1-4411-8624-9 , retrieved 2017-07-01
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