Sir Peter le Page Renouf (1822-97), a Guernseyman, was described by Lord
Acton as "the most learned Englishman I know". The remarkable collection
of his surviving letters, to be published in four volumes by University
College Dublin Press between 2002 and 2004, covers Renouf's varied
career from his days as a student in Oxford, his time as a lecturer in
the 1850s at the new Catholic University in Dublin until after his
retirement as Keeper of Egyptian and Assyrian Antiquities at the British
Museum. The letters in volume 2 cover Renouf's years as Tutor to the son
of the Comte de Vaulchier in France and, from 1850, there are frequent
trips to Switzerland. People and places are vividly described in his
letters to his family. The letters of 1848 are particularly interesting
on account of the revolution. Through the Comte de Vaulchier he had come
to know Adolphe de Circourt, Lamartine's friend, and he was kept well
informed about the political situation as it developed. He was
preoccupied with politics again in 1851 and for a time helped the Comte,
who was a liberal and well-educated man, to edit Union France-Comte, the
provincial newspaper of Franche-Comte.