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Jean Charles Léonard de Sismondi : ウィキペディア英語版
Jean Charles Léonard de Sismondi

Jean Charles Léonard de Sismondi (a.k.a. Jean Charles Leonard Simonde de Sismondi) (; May 19, 1773 in Geneva – June 25, 1842 in Chêne-Bougeries, Canton of Geneva),〔(www.encyclopedia.org )〕 whose real name was Simonde, was a historian and political economist, who is best known for his works on French and Italian history, and his economic ideas.
==Early life==
His father and all his ancestors seem to have borne the name Simonde, at least from the time when they migrated from Dauphiné to Switzerland at the revocation of the edict of Nantes. It was not till after Sismondi had become an author that, observing the identity of his family arms with those of the once flourishing Pisan house of the Sismondi and finding that some members of that house had migrated to France, he assumed the connection without further proof and called himself Sismondi.
The Simondes, however, were themselves citizens of Geneva of the upper class, and possessed both rank and property, though the father was also a village pastor. His uncle by marriage was the prominent pastor Jacob Vernes, a friend of Voltaire and Rousseau.
The future historian was well educated, but his family wished him to devote himself to commerce rather than literature, and he became a banker's clerk in Lyon. Then the Revolution broke out, and as it affected Geneva, the Simonde family took refuge in England where they stayed for eighteen months (1793–1794). Disliking—it is said—the climate, they returned to Geneva, but found the state of affairs still unfavourable; there is even a legend that the head of the family was reduced to sell milk himself in the town. The greater part of the family property was sold, and with the proceeds they emigrated to Italy, bought a small farm in Pescia near Lucca and Pistoia, and set to work to cultivate it themselves.
Sismondi worked hard there, with both his hands and mind, and his experiences gave him the material of his first book, ''Tableau de l'agriculture toscane'', which, after returning to Geneva, he published there in 1801. At a young age, Sismondi had read The Wealth of Nations and became strongly attached to Smith's theories. He apparently published his first work on the subject of political economy, ''De la richesse commerciale ou principes de l'economie politique appliqué à la legislation du commerce'' (1803) to explain and popularize Smith's doctrine, but following this Sismondi spent a considerable amount of time dedicated to historical research. He again turned his attention to political economy around 1818 when he was commissioned to write an entry on "political economy" for the Edinburgh Encyclopedia. This was just following a serious economic downturn after the outbreak of the first major crisis in 1815.〔https://www.marxists.org/archive/kuruma/crisis-intro.htm〕

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