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  1. Charles-Joseph Panckoucke (26/11/1736-19/12/1798) fue un escritor y editor francés, conocido por la Encyclopédie Méthodique, sucesora de La Encyclopédie de Denis Diderot. Nació en Lille , hijo y nieto de impresores, su padre André Joseph Panckoucke (1700-1753) era también escritor y librero.

  2. Charles-Joseph Panckoucke (French: [ʃaʁl ʒɔzɛf pɑ̃kuk]; 26 November 1736 – 19 December 1798) was a French writer and publisher. He was responsible for numerous influential publications of the era, including the literary journal Mercure de France and the Encyclopédie Méthodique , a successor to the Encyclopédie by Denis ...

  3. Charles-Joseph Panckoucke, né le 26 novembre 1736 à Paris et mort le 19 décembre 1798 dans la même ville, est un libraire-éditeur français, propriétaire de plusieurs journaux. À l'origine de l'Encyclopédie méthodique, Il est le créateur du premier empire économique du livre en France.

  4. Overview. Charles-Joseph Panckoucke. (1736—1798) Quick Reference. (1736–98) French publisher and bookseller. Beginning his career in Lille, where his father was a printer and publisher, he moved to Paris in 1762, soon becoming the wealthiest and most ... From: Panckoucke, Charles-Joseph in The Oxford Companion to the Book »

  5. Charles-Joseph Panckoucke. Paris 1736-11-26 – 1798-12-19 Paris French, Italian, Latin Main: Paris Other: London booksellerjournalistpamphleteerpublishertranslatorwriter Panckoucke, Charles-Joseph, 1736-1798 (viaf) Panckoucke, Charles Joseph (cerl) Charles-Joseph Panckoucke (wikidata) Contributions.

  6. Charles-Joseph Panckoucke was one of the most successful. newspaper editors and publishers of his age; among his. authors were such distinguished eighteenth-century figures. as Voltaire, Rousseau, and Buffon. In 1782 Panckoucke started the publication of the Encyclopedie methodique.

  7. Charles-Joseph Panckoucke & La Librairie FranVaise, 1736-1798. By Suzanne Tucoo-Chala. Pau: Marrimpouey Jeune & Cie, 1977; Paris: Touzot Librairie, 1977. Pp. 558. F 150. For historians of eighteenth-century French journalism and the book trade, Charles-Joseph Panckoucke is both ubiquitous and an enigma. Arriving in