André Terrasson (1669 – 25 April 1723) was a French Oratorian preacher.

Life edit

He was born at Lyon, the eldest son of a councillor of the Lyon presidial (court of justice). Gaspard Terrasson was his brother. Entering the Congregation of the Oratory, he devoted himself to preaching, where he gained a high reputation.

He preached the Lenten sermons of 1717 before Louis XIV, next at the Court of Lorraine, and later twice in the metropolitan church of Paris; the last of these series broke down his health and led to his death at Paris.

Works edit

About fifty of his discourses, mostly delivered as Lenten lectures, are preserved, and were published at Paris (4 vols., 1726, 1736).

References edit

Attribution
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "André Terrasson". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. The entry cites:
    • Jean-Marie-Joseph Thomasseau de Cursay, Mémoires sur les savants de la famille de Terrasson (Trévoux, 1761);
    • Nouvelles ecclésiastiques (1736, 1744);
    • Supplément au nécrologe des plus célèbres défenseurs de la vérité (s. l., 1763), 120;
    • Jules Candel, Les prédicateurs français dans la première moitié du XVIIIe siècle (Paris, 1904);
    • Pierre Féret [fr], La Faculté de théologie de Paris, Epoque moderne, VI (Paris, 1909), 144.