Suzanne Verdier (1745 – 1813) was a French writer. She was a contributor to the Encyclopédie.
In 1807, Verdier was elected member of the Academy of Nîmes. She was awarded three crowns at the Floral Games, which earned her the title of master of the academy, Consistori del Gay Saber. She was also admitted to the Accademia degli Arcadi, the Academy of Gard, and the Athenaeum of Vaucluse. What is perhaps no less flattering than these public tributes to Verdier was the testimony given in her regard by the literary women of her time, an example being a statement made by Henriette Bourdic-Viot to Adelaide Dufrenoy: "We are a crowd of musettes, Madame Verdier alone is a muse." Verdier left a touching elegy for her brother, Antoine, who was guillotined as a Girondin. She died in 1813 in Uzès after an attack of apoplexy.
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