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A libertine is a person questioning and challenging most moral principles, such as responsibility or sexual restraints, and will often declare these traits as unnecessary, undesirable or evil. A libertine is especially someone who ignores or even spurns accepted morals and forms of behaviour observed by the larger society. "libertine" at The values and practices of libertines are known collectively as libertinism or libertinage and are described as an extreme form of or .

(2011). 9780812201895, University of Pennsylvania Press. .
Libertines put value on physical pleasures, meaning those experienced through the senses. As a philosophy, libertinism gained new-found adherents in the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries, particularly in and Great Britain. Notable among these were John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester, Cyrano de Bergerac, and the Marquis de Sade.


History of the term
The word libertine was originally coined by to negatively describe opponents of his policies in , Switzerland. The group, led by , argued against Calvin's "insistence that church discipline should be enforced uniformly against all members of Genevan society".
(2025). 9780130977649, Prentice Hall.
Perrin and his allies were elected to the town council in 1548, and "broadened their support base in Geneva by stirring up resentment among the older inhabitants against the increasing number of religious refugees who were fleeing France in even greater numbers". By 1555, were firmly in place on the Genevan town council, so the Libertines, led by Perrin, responded with an "attempted coup against the government and called for the massacre of the French. This was the last great political challenge Calvin had to face in Geneva". In England, a few held libertine views such as that adultery and fornication were not sin, or that "whoever died in faith would be saved irrespective of his way of life".
(1972). 9780801492891, Cornell University Press. .

During the 18th and 19th centuries, the term became more associated with debauchery.

(2025). 9781135960056, Routledge.
Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand wrote that "sought only life's pleasures and easy access to libertinism" while on the throne of Naples.
(2025). 9780312431105, Bedford/St. Martin's.


Literature
Les Liaisons dangereuses ( Dangerous Liaisons, 1782), an by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos, is a trenchant description of sexual libertinism. argues: "... the mere analysis of libertinism ... carried out by a novelist with such a prodigious command of his medium ... was enough to condemn it and play a large part in its destruction." Agreeable to Calvin's emphasis on the need for uniformity of discipline in Geneva, Samuel Rutherford (Professor of Divinity in the University of St. Andrews, and Christian minister in 17th-century Scotland) offered a rigorous treatment of "Libertinism" in his polemical work "A Free Disputation Against Pretended Liberty of Conscience" (1649).

A Satyr Against Reason and Mankind is a poem by John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester which addresses the question of the proper use of , and is generally assumed to be a critique of . The narrator subordinates reason to sense.

(2025). 9781843835905, Boydell & Brewer.
It is based to some extent on Boileau's version of 's eighth or fifteenth satire, and is also indebted to Hobbes, , , and , as well as the general libertine tradition. Confusion has arisen in its interpretation as it is ambiguous as to whether the speaker is Rochester himself, or a satirised persona.
(1993). 9780521440424, Cambridge University Press.
It criticises the vanities and corruptions of the statesmen and politicians of the court of Charles II.
(2025). 9781843835905, Boydell & Brewer.

The was a primarily 18th-century literary genre of which the roots lay in the European but mainly French libertine tradition. The genre effectively ended with the French Revolution. Themes of libertine novels were , anti-establishment and eroticism.

Authors include Claude Prosper Jolyot de Crébillon ( Les Égarements du cœur et de l'esprit, 1736; Le Sopha, conte moral, 1742), ( Les bijoux indiscrets, 1748), Marquis de Sade ( L'Histoire de Juliette, 1797–1801), Choderlos de Laclos ( Les Liaisons dangereuses, 1782), and John Wilmot ( Sodom, or the Quintessence of Debauchery, 1684).

Other famous titles are Histoire de Dom Bougre, Portier des Chartreux (1741) and Thérèse Philosophe (1748).

Precursors to the libertine writers were Théophile de Viau (1590–1626) and Charles de Saint-Evremond (1610–1703), who were inspired by and the publication of .

is a cultural historian who has covered this genre extensively.Darnton, Robert.

(1996). 9780393314427, Norton.
A three-part essay in The Book Collector by David Foxen explores libertine literature in England, 1660-1745.Foxen, David (1963). “Libertine Literature in England, 1660-1745," The Book Collector 12 no. 1: 21-35 (spring); 12 no 2: 159-177 (summer); 12 no 3: 294-307 (autumn).

Critics have been divided as to the literary merits of 's Liber Amoris, a deeply personal account of frustrated love that is quite unlike anything else Hazlitt ever wrote. Wardle suggests that it was compelling but marred by sickly sentimentality, and also proposes that Hazlitt might even have been anticipating some of the experiments in chronology made by later novelists.Wardle, pp. 363–65. Wardle was writing in 1971; twenty-first-century critics continue to be sharply divided. David Armitage has assessed the book disparagingly as "the result of a tormented mind grasping literary motifs in a desperate and increasingly unsuccessful (and self indulgent) attempt to communicate its descent into incoherence...", while Gregory Dart has acclaimed it "the most powerful account of unrequited love in English literature". To James Ley, "It is ... an unsparing account of the psychology of obsession, the way a mind in the grip of an all-consuming passion can distort reality to its own detriment". Armitage, p. 223; Dart 2012, p. 85; Ley p. 38.

One or two positive reviews appeared, such as the one in the Globe, 7 June 1823: "The Liber Amoris is unique in the English language; and as, possibly, the first book in its fervour, its vehemency, and its careless exposure of passion and weakness—of sentiments and sensations which the common race of mankind seek most studiously to mystify or conceal—that exhibits a portion of the most distinguishing characteristics of Rousseau, it ought to be generally praised".Quoted by Jones, p. 338. in his book London's Sinful Secret summarized Hazlitt's infatuation stating: "Decades after her death Batsy (Careless) still haunted the imagination of the essayist William Hazlitt, a man who lodged near Covent Garden during the 1820s, where he became unpleasantly intimate with the social consequences of unconventional sexual obsession that he revealed in his Liber Amoris of 1823, in which he candidly confessed to his infatuation with his landlord's young daughter.", London's Sinful Secret, p.92. St. Martin's Press, New York (2009).


Philosophy
During the in France, there existed a circle of philosophers and intellectuals who were collectively known as libertinage érudit and which included Gabriel Naudé, Élie Diodati and François de La Mothe Le Vayer.
(2025). 9782051018180, Slatkine.
The critic Vivian de Sola Pinto linked John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester's libertinism to .


Notable libertines
Some notable libertines include:


Rulers and political figures
  • , the sixth ruler
    (2025). 9781441133182, Bloomsbury Publishing.
  • , third Emperor of Rome
  • George IV of the United Kingdom
  • Henry IV of France
  • Louis XV of France, King of France from 1715 to 1774
  • Sir Charles Sedley, 5th Baronet, English noble
  • Dominique Strauss-Kahn, French economist and politician
  • (1991). 9780719033018, Manchester University Press. .


Religious leaders


Actors


Musicians


Writers


Others


See also

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