Le parfumeur Martial : réalité historique du parcours d’un marchand mercier sous Louis XIV

The work of historians on perfumery in the Ancien Régime has brought a number of figures to light. This article looks at one of them, Martial, described as perfumer to Louis XIV. Historiography records him as the Sun King’s personal perfumer. Contemporary literary sources, however, paint a different...

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Main Author: Alice Camus
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles 2020-10-01
Series:Bulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/crcv/18216
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spelling doaj-35e955a6c0c7473689cd861dcf368a5e2020-11-25T04:00:48ZengCentre de Recherche du Château de VersaillesBulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles1958-92712020-10-0110.4000/crcv.18216Le parfumeur Martial : réalité historique du parcours d’un marchand mercier sous Louis XIVAlice CamusThe work of historians on perfumery in the Ancien Régime has brought a number of figures to light. This article looks at one of them, Martial, described as perfumer to Louis XIV. Historiography records him as the Sun King’s personal perfumer. Contemporary literary sources, however, paint a different picture, that of an artisan renowned for the quality of his scented gloves, and make no mention of any connection to the king. The source behind Martial’s promotion to king’s perfumer is a perfume treatise published by Simon Barbe in 1693. But research into his true identity, using notarial archives, provides a clearer picture of his activities and suggests a quite different historical reality: Martial Parmentier was a marchand mercier – a seller of fancy goods – who had built up a solid network of representatives in parliament circles and the royal court. He was not a member of the guild of glovers and perfumers, and sources reveal no link whatsoever with Louis XIV. However, this portrait highlights the strong interaction between the glove and perfume and fancy goods trades, and consumers’ lively interest in their products.http://journals.openedition.org/crcv/18216perfumeryglove sellerfancy goods sellerartisansPariscourt
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alice Camus
spellingShingle Alice Camus
Le parfumeur Martial : réalité historique du parcours d’un marchand mercier sous Louis XIV
Bulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles
perfumery
glove seller
fancy goods seller
artisans
Paris
court
author_facet Alice Camus
author_sort Alice Camus
title Le parfumeur Martial : réalité historique du parcours d’un marchand mercier sous Louis XIV
title_short Le parfumeur Martial : réalité historique du parcours d’un marchand mercier sous Louis XIV
title_full Le parfumeur Martial : réalité historique du parcours d’un marchand mercier sous Louis XIV
title_fullStr Le parfumeur Martial : réalité historique du parcours d’un marchand mercier sous Louis XIV
title_full_unstemmed Le parfumeur Martial : réalité historique du parcours d’un marchand mercier sous Louis XIV
title_sort le parfumeur martial : réalité historique du parcours d’un marchand mercier sous louis xiv
publisher Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles
series Bulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles
issn 1958-9271
publishDate 2020-10-01
description The work of historians on perfumery in the Ancien Régime has brought a number of figures to light. This article looks at one of them, Martial, described as perfumer to Louis XIV. Historiography records him as the Sun King’s personal perfumer. Contemporary literary sources, however, paint a different picture, that of an artisan renowned for the quality of his scented gloves, and make no mention of any connection to the king. The source behind Martial’s promotion to king’s perfumer is a perfume treatise published by Simon Barbe in 1693. But research into his true identity, using notarial archives, provides a clearer picture of his activities and suggests a quite different historical reality: Martial Parmentier was a marchand mercier – a seller of fancy goods – who had built up a solid network of representatives in parliament circles and the royal court. He was not a member of the guild of glovers and perfumers, and sources reveal no link whatsoever with Louis XIV. However, this portrait highlights the strong interaction between the glove and perfume and fancy goods trades, and consumers’ lively interest in their products.
topic perfumery
glove seller
fancy goods seller
artisans
Paris
court
url http://journals.openedition.org/crcv/18216
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