The Abbé de Saint-Pierre's works are centered…
April 1708 CE to 1719 CE
He has a great influence on Rousseau, who will leave elaborate examinations of some of them, and is a forerunner of Kant's 1795 essay on perpetual peace.
He can be seen as an early proponent of the ideas of the Enlightenment.
Saint-Pierre is one of the first to mention the possibility of a European union made by independent and autonomous states.
His work on a European community directly inspires the idea of an international order based on the principle of collective self-defense, and is important to the creation of the Concert of Europe, and later the League of Nations, whose successor is the United Nations Organization.
Frederick the Great of Prussia writes to Voltaire on the 'Projet pour render la paix perpétuelle en Europe': "The Abbe de Saint-Pierre has sent me a fine work on how to re-establish peace in Europe. The thing is very practicable. All it lacks to be successful, is the consent of all Europe and a few other such small details." ( Dosenrode, Søren (1998). Danske EUropavisioner. Århus: Systime. p. 10.)
Ideas contributed by Saint-Pierre include:
an equitable tax system, including a graduated income tax,
free public education, for women as well as men,
state improvement of transportation to further commerce,
an international court and league of states (Projet de paix perpétuelle 1713),
a constitutional monarchy, aided by a system of councils and an academy of experts (Discours sur la polysynodie 1718).
Saint-Pierre was born at the château of Saint-Pierre-Église near Cherbourg, where his father, the Marquis de Saint-Pierre, was grand bailli of Cotentin.
He was educated by the Jesuits.
The youngest of five children and unsuited to a military career owing to poor health, he became a priest.
He was introduced by family connections into the salons of Madame de la Fayette and the Marquise de Lambert in Paris.
He was elected to the Académie française in 1695, although he had previously produced no notable work; his election was an episode in the Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns, Saint-Pierre being a clear representative of the latter.
The same year he gained a footing at court as chaplain to Madame, the king's sister-in-law.
From 1703 to his death, he was abbot of Tiron.
Contrary to a widely believed opinion, it is not while working as a negotiator of the Treaty of Utrecht (1712–13) that he develops his project of universal peace.
Saint-Pierre worked on the idea from 1708 and publishes early versions from 1712.
In 1718, he publishes Discours sur la polysynodie, where he proposes that appointed ministers be replaced by elected councils.
As a consequence of his criticism of the policy of Louis XIV (d. 1715) he is expelled from the Académie later the same year.