Baillet, Adrien
BAILLET, bɑ̄´´yê´, ADRIEN: Roman Catholic;
b. at Neuville, near Beauvais (54 m. n.n.w. of Paris),
June 13, 1649; d. in Paris Jan. 21, 1706. He was
educated in the Seminary of Beauvais; became a
priest 1675 and obtained a small vicarage; in 1680
he was appointed secretary to Lamoignon, president
of the Parliament of Paris, and spent the rest
of his life in unremitting devotion to study. His
most important works were: Jugements des savants
sur les principaux ouvrages et auteurs (9 vols., Paris,
1685-86); Les vies des saints (3 vols., 1695-1701);
Vie de Descartes (2 vols., 1691); Histoire
de Hollande, a continuation of Grotius (4 vols., 1693).
He was favorable to the Jansenists and has been
called hypercritical. A monograph, De la dévotion
à la Sainte Vierge et du culte qui lui est dû (1693)
was thought to attack the doctrine and practise
of the Church and put upon the Index, and a like
fate befell the first and second volumes of the
Vies des saints, which were said to contain remarks
little short of slanderous. The first volume of
the Amsterdam edition (1725) of the Jugements
des savants contains an Abrégé of his life.