Aristide Frémine
Appearance
Literature | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | ||||||
Oral literature | ||||||
Major written forms | ||||||
|
||||||
Prose genres | ||||||
|
||||||
Poetry genres | ||||||
|
||||||
Dramatic genres | ||||||
History | ||||||
Lists and outlines | ||||||
Theory and criticism | ||||||
![]() | ||||||
Aristide Frémine (1837 - December 5, 1897) was a French writer.
He was a native of Bricquebec, in the département of Manche and is often associated with his brother, the writer Charles Frémine, born in 1841. He is most notably the author of the famous epic verse, Legend of Normandy (Légende de Normandie), a romance called A Young Lady of the Open Country (Une Demoiselle de Campagne) (1892) and of a study called The French on the Isles of Manche (Les Français dans les Îles de la Manche). He was also a serial contributor to the daily Le Figaro between 1884 and 1888. He died in Issy-les-Moulineaux, Seine-Saint-Denis.
Source