Elisée Reclus 
 
  
 
Born: March 15, 1830  
 
  
 
Died: July 4, 1905  
 
  
 
 
- Ishill, Joseph. (1927). Elisée and Elie Reclus: In Memoriam.
 
- Including: tributes, appreciations and essays by Elie Faure, Prof. Albert Heim, Jean Grave [and others] fragments, letters, and ... woodcuts by Louis Moreau. Compiled, ed.  and printed by Joseph Ishill. Berkeley Heights, N.J.: Oriole Press. 
 
  
- Hidalgo, H. Spanish Biography.
 
  
-  Biographical entry from the 1911 edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica, pages 957-58.
 
  
- Obituary from the London Telegraph, reprinted in the New York Times, July 24, 1905.
 
- Obituary written by Kropotkin
 
    
Timeline
1830  Reclus is born in Sainte-Foy-la-Grande, Gironde, France on March 15th to Jacques Reclus and Zéline Trigant 
  
1831  Father leaves Sainte-Foy and Reclus is left with his grandparents in Laroche
  
1838  Reunited with his family in Casteetarbes
  
1842  Travels to Neuwied, Germany for schooling and learns multiple languages at the multinational school of the Moravian Brothers
  
1844  Rejoins with his older brother Elie at the Protestant College of Sainte-Foy 
  
1848  Moves to Montauban to study theology with Elie. Is advised to leave Mantabaun owning to his defiance of his teachers and travels the Mediterranean after which he leaves for Strasbourg to study theology
  
1849  Teaches for the Moravian brothers in Neuwied
  
Jan 1851 Resigns from his teaching post at Neuwied to study at the University of Berlin where he attends many lectures by the noted geographer Carl Ritter
  
1851  As a 21 year old scholar Reclus publishes the essay "Development of Liberty in the World," which lays the foundation for this mature thinking.  In it he argues that "For each particular man liberty is an end, but it is only a means to attain love, to attain universal brotherhood."  In this work he also lays the groundwork for his anarchist ideals stating that, "Our destiny is to arrive at that state of ideal perfection where nations no longer have any need to be under the tutelage of a government or any other nation.  It is the absence of government; it is anarchy, the highest expression of order."
  
Dec 1851  Returns to France to oppose Napoleons coup but he and his brother are then forced to leave to England
  
1852  Reclus works as a tutor in London and then Dublin 
  
Early 1853  Reclus travels to New Orleans. In New Orleans he works as a dockworker and also as a tutor.  This trip represents an important stage in the development of his social and political ideas.  During his time in Louisiana Reclus became staunchly opposed to slavery and racism and was strengthened in his belief in the inhumanity of capitalism
  
1855  Reclus leaves the US for Panama, from there he heads to Columbia via smaller ships and spends a year and a half planning a plantation venture
  
July 1, 1857  Reclus falls ill in South America and returns to Paris
  
December 14, 1858  Marries Clarisse Brian of Sainte-Foy, daughter of a French sea captain and a "mulatto" Senegalese woman, and moves in with his brother Elie and his wife Noemi in Paris
  
1860  Reclus' first daughter Magali is born
  
1860's  Reclus spends long amounts of time traveling and conducting research for many travel guides for the publishing firm Hachette.  During this time Reclus also completes the first of the three great geographical projects of his life, the two-volume study La Terre: description des phénomènes de la vie du globe.  During this time he was involved with the Freemasons, the Freethinkers before, in the mid-60s joining the secret International Alliance of Social Democracy of Michael Bakunin, and the League for Peace and Freedom
  
1861  Reclus publishes Voyage à la Sierra Nevada
  
1862  Reclus is invited to join the Société de Géographie de Paris
  
1863  Reclus' second daughter Jeannie is born
  
1863  Reclus and his brother Elie found the Banque Coopérative du Crédit au Travail 
  
1864  Reclus publishes Les Volcans et les Tremblements de Terre
  
1864  Elisée and Elie help to co-found the first Rochdale-type cooperative in Paris: L'Association générale d'approvisionnement et de consommation
  
1865  Reclus publishes La Sicile et l'éruption de l'Etna
  
1865  Travels to Florence where he visits Bakunin and is introduced to the local circle of activists
  
September 24, 1868  Reclus gives an address, while participating in the Berne Congress, that promoted wide-ranging decentralization
  
1869  Reclus publishes La Terre et Histoire d'un ruisseau
  
1869  Reclus' wife Clarisse dies
  
1870  Reclus informally marries Fanny Lherminez
  
1870  During the siege of Paris Reclus shared in aerostatic operations conducted by Félix Nadar and served in the National Guard
  
1871  As a member of the Association Nationale des Travailleurs, Reclus publishes a hostile manifesto against the government of Versailles in support of the Paris Commune in the Cri du Peuple 
  
March 18-May 28 1871  Paris Commune
  
April 5, 1871  Continuing to serve in the National Guard, now in open revolt, Reclus is taken prisoner 
  
November 1871  Reclus is tried and sentenced to prison in New Caledonia his sentence is mitigated by an international petition signed by many scientists including Charles Darwin 
  
January 1872  Reclus is sentenced to perpetual banishment from France
  
1871  Moves to Clarens in Switzerland until 1892
  
1874  Fanny Lherminez dies
  
1875  Reclus moves in with his third spouse Ermance Gonini
  
1876  Reclus is the first to adopt the theory of anarcho-communism later propagated by the Italian section of the International, though he advocated for distribution regulated by solidarity rather than the "From each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs", the slogan stressed by Italian anarcho-communists
  
1876  Reclus delivers a eulogy at the funeral of his good friend, the great revolutionary Michael Bakunin in Berne
  
1880  Reclus publishes the anarchist pamphlet Evolution et revolution
  
1882  Reclus' Father dies
  
1882  Reclus is purported to have initiated the "Anti-marriage movement" from his residence in Geneva
  
1882  Reclus declares that there were only two principles at work in society: "on the one side, that of government, on the other, that of anarchy, authority and liberty... All revolutionary acts are, by their very nature, essentially anarchical, whatever the power which seeks to profit from them."  Reclus believed that every revolt against oppression is therefore good to a degree and was not opposed to the rational use of force when necessary.  To make use of force can be an expression of love when it is used to fight oppression and injustice.
  
1883-1884  Reclus travels to Asia Minor, Egypt, Tunisia, and Algeria
  
1894  Completes and publishes his geographical volume titled Nouvelle Géographie Universelle. His work is awarded the gold medal of the Paris Geographical Society afterward he moves to Brussels, Belgium where he becomes a professor of comparative geography at the New University of Brussels
  
1893  Reclus publishes the anarchist pamphlet A mon frère, le paysan
  
1893 and 1895  Reclus attends the Edinburgh Summer Meetings and engaged in lecture tours
  
1884  Reclus is appointed chair of comparative geography at the University of Brussels
  
1895  Reclus proposes the construction of a huge relief globe on the scale of 1:100,000 but this project did not ever come to fruition.
  
Early 1900s  After the failure of the anarchist reign of terror in the early 1890s Reclus began to stress the gradual and evolutionary side of social change.  He argued that "evolution and revolution are two successive acts of the same phenomenon, evolution preceding revolution, and the latter preceding a new evolution, mother of future revolutions"
  
July 4, 1905  Reclus dies from heart disease in Torhout, Belgium at the age of 75
  
 
              
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