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Il parlait assez bien français et plusieurs langues: Foreign Language Acquisition and the Diplomatic Self-Fashioning of Prince Boris Ivanovich Kurakin

Publication ,  Journal Article
Zitser, EA
Published in: Quaestio Rossica
January 1, 2023

Using the example of Prince B. I. Kurakin (1676-1727), the Imperial Russian diplomat who served as extraordinary and plenipotentiary ambassador to France (1724-1727), this article seeks to contribute to the ongoing discussion about the possible reasons for the adoption of French as the language of international communication in general and eighteenth-century diplomacy in particular. It asks when the Moscow-born Gediminid prince learned to speak French and how this non-native speaker of the language became proficient enough to impress a finicky and fastidious interlocutor like Louis de Rouvroy, duc de Saint-Simon (1675-1755). The author suggests that the answer to these questions lies not in Russia or France, but in Poland and Italy; and not in the halls of formal educational institutions, but in the networks of personal connections that were sustained as much by face-to-face communication as by written correspondence. This brief biographical survey of the development of Prince Kurakin’s “linguistic personality” demonstrates the mediating role of modern, vernacular languages (Russian, Polish, Italian) in the transition from Latin to French as the lingua franca of international diplomacy. It also emphasizes the intimate connection between foreign language acquisition and diplomatic self-fashioning, showing how linguistic knowledge could be instrumentalized for both personal and professional advancement. In doing so, it illustrates the active role that individual brokers - especially, but not exclusively, aristocratic royal servitors with broad linguistic skills and extensive international connections, like Prince Kurakin and the duc de Saint-Simon - played in creating the very notion of an early modern “European” style of diplomacy based on the cultural dominance of the French language.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Quaestio Rossica

DOI

EISSN

2313-6871

ISSN

2311-911X

Publication Date

January 1, 2023

Volume

11

Issue

4

Start / End Page

1232 / 1247

Related Subject Headings

  • 4705 Literary studies
  • 4703 Language studies
  • 4303 Historical studies
  • 2103 Historical Studies
  • 2003 Language Studies
  • 2002 Cultural Studies
 

Published In

Quaestio Rossica

DOI

EISSN

2313-6871

ISSN

2311-911X

Publication Date

January 1, 2023

Volume

11

Issue

4

Start / End Page

1232 / 1247

Related Subject Headings

  • 4705 Literary studies
  • 4703 Language studies
  • 4303 Historical studies
  • 2103 Historical Studies
  • 2003 Language Studies
  • 2002 Cultural Studies