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Marcus Vulson de la Colombière : ウィキペディア英語版
Marcus Vulson de la Colombière

Marcus Vulson de la Colombière (†1658 or 1665) or Sieur () de la Colombière was a French heraldist, historian, poet, minion of the royal court. His name is often spelt as Wulson and also as Volson.
He published several highly successful books on symbols, prophecies, heraldry, dreams etc. He put together all the available knowledge and traditions associated with chivalry. In the 17th century chivalry was practically rediscovered by two genealogists and sycophants in the French court: Colombière and Claude-François Ménestrier after its golden age (1100–1400) and the decline of chivalry, developing its idealized image. Some authors named de la Colombière as the inventor of hatching system of tinctures.
== Biography ==

We have only some fragmented data about his life. Even the 19th century big biographies deliver only incomplete information about him. He was born in a Protestant noble family at the end of the 16th century in Dauphiné. He was a son of Francois, advocat and Michelle Odde de Bonniot.〔"G. de Rivoire de La Batie: Armorial et Histoire de Dauphiné, Fam. de Vulson, p. 815"〕 In his youth, he fought for Henry IV. According to a curious anecdote, in 1618 he went to Paris to request grace, after he killed his treacherous wife and her lover.〔"Ayant un jour surpris sa femme en adultere, il la tua elle et son gallant; il vint en poste à Paris solliciter sa grace, qu'il obtint. Cet evénement arriva à Grenoble en 1618. Depuis l'on menaçoit dans cette ville les femmes coquettes da la vulsonade." (Thomas Moule, ''Bibliotheca heraldica Magnæ Britanniæ''. London, 1822. p. 616) (Comp. Chaudon, L. M. (Mayeul ): Dictionnaire universel, historique, critique, et bibliographique. Paris XVIII. 1812. p. 149)〕
According to the title pages of his books, (see for example ''Le Vray Théâtre d´honneur et de Chevalerie'', Paris, 1648), he was a member of parliament (self-government) in Paris and the member of the Order of Saint Michael (''gentilhomme de la Chambre du Roi et Décoré de l’Ordre de Saint-Michel''). By all probability, until 1635 he was staying in Grenoble as he was a royal counselor in the Dauphiné parliament (''conseiller du roi en la cour de parlement de Dauphiné''). He also published a book in the spirit of the Gallicanism in Geneva that year. (It can be noted that several of the Protestant priests and students at the Geneva University were his kinsmen.) Gallicanism served as a proper means to express his Protestant views in opposition to Catholicism, and he presented them in such a way that it was even appreciated by the state establishment too.
Colombière’s ideas suited the king’s taste too, as a result he left Grenoble and settled down in Paris, where he devoted his entire energy to study heraldry. According to the catalogues of the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, his next book was published in Paris in 1638.

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