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Pierre Loti (Writing)

Male

D.O.B: 1850-01-14

D.O.D: 1923-06-10

Louis-Marie-Julien Viaud, known as Pierre Loti, born on January 14, 1850, in Rochefort, and died on June 10, 1923, in Hendaye, was a French writer, naval officer, and member of the Académie Française. Pierre Loti, whose work is largely autobiographical, drew inspiration from his travels for his novels, for example, in Tahiti for *Le Mariage de Loti* (Rarahu) (1882), in Senegal for *Le Roman d'un spahi* (1881), and in Japan for *Madame Chrysanthème* (1887). Throughout his life, he retained a strong affinity for Turkey, where he was fascinated by the role of sensuality: he notably illustrates this in *Aziyadé* (1879) and its sequel, *Phantom of the Orient* (1892). Pierre Loti also explored regional exoticism in some of his best-known works, such as Brittany in the novels *Mon frère Yves* (1883) and *Pêcheur d'Islande* (1886), and the Basque Country in *Ramuntcho* (1897). A member of the French Academy from 1891, he died...