aid from nobles, 161, 898
   aid to Swiss middle class, 643
   d’Alembert and, 163, 191
   American Revolution and, 867
   appearance of, 26, 202
   Armenian costume of, 192, 209
   attitude toward reason, 169, 888
   attitude toward women, 8
   Bernardin de Saint-Pierre and, 883–84, 886, 916–17
   Boswell and, 133, 152, 782
   Catherine II and, 173
   Casanova and, 324
   Confessions of, see Confessions
   constitutions for Poland and Corsica, 178, 202, 482
   critique of celibacy, 168–69
   descriptions of, 207–8, 209–10, 211
   Émile of, see Émile
   Encyclopédie and, 3, 25, 33
   exhortations on nursing, 97, 180
   Frederick II and, 173, 191–92, 202, 207–8, 212–13, 497
   French Revolution and, 84, 899, 940
   on friendship, 153
   Geneva and, 163–64, 177, 197
   Gluck and, 368, 370–71, 372
   Grimm and, 3–4, 5*, 18, 23, 153, 159–62, 170, 201, 207–8, 212
   hatred of injustice, 6, 12
   hatred of Paris, 153, 168
   d’Holbach and, 153
   Houdon’s bust of, 912
   Hume and, 207, 209, 211–14
   influence of, 3–4, 230, 508, 518, 520–21, 880, 887–92, 898
   on Index Expurgatorius, 316
   on Jews, 629–30
   Samuel Johnson’s dislike of, 834–35
   La Tour’s painting of, 26
   literary style of, 169–70
   Louis XVI and, 867
   love of nature, 7, 11, 30, 169
   Mme. d’Épinay and, 4, 5*, 18, 26, 36–37, 153, 156–61, 178, 884
   Mme. de Warens and, 7, 9–15
   Mme. d’Houdetot and, 152, 156–58, 162, 164
   Malesherbes and, 189
   on marriage, 152
   morality of, 21, 180, 880
   musical theories of, 100, 154, 232
   music-copying work of, 17–18, 192, 201
   needlework of, 192
   Nouvelle Héloïse, La, of, see Julie, ou La Nouvelle Héloïse
   in Panthéon, 110
   personality of, 6, 26, 152, 208–9
   philosophes and, 161–65, 182–83, 195, 214 (see also below Rousseau, DIDEROT AND; Rousseau, VOLTAIRE AND);
   Plato’s influence on, 177, 188
   popularity of, 890–91
   primacy of feeling in, 169
   on reception of Julie, 170, Romantic movement and, 3, 157, 887
   Saint-Lambert and, 164
   sensitivity of, 152, 208–9
   sexual problems of, 6, 8, 14–15, 16
   Social Contract of, see Social Contract
   status as a musical composer, 25
   support for French opera, 372
   theories of theater, 163
   timidity of, 6, 26
   views on marriage, 186–87
   visit by Joseph II, 897
   vows never to write again, 205
   Walpole’s hoax on, 208–9, 212–14
   EARLY LIFE AND WANDERINGS OF (1712–40): birth, 5
   education and readings, 6–7
   early loves, 6–7, 9–11, 13
   apprenticeship, 7
   relations with Mme. de Warens, 7, 9–10, 12–14
   conversion to Catholicism, 7
   as footman, 8–9
   studies for priesthood, 9
   love of nature, 11
   teaches music, 11
   passion for walking, 11–12
   exposure to Enlightenment, 13–14
   pantheistic beliefs, 14
   IN LYONS, PARIS, AND VENICE (1740–44): tutors Mably children, 14, 178
   offers marriage to Suzanne Serre, 14
   dismissed by Mably, 15
   Narcisse read by Marivaux, 15
   meets Diderot in Paris, 15–16
   visits Parisian salons, 16
   secretary to French Embassy in Venice, 16
   dismissal and appeals, 16–17
   IN PARIS AND GENEVA (1744–56): copies musi inc in Paris, 17–18
   lives with Thérèse Levasseur, 17–18
   sends children to foundling asylum, 18, 24, 178
   revises Les Muses galantes, 18–19
   corresponds with Voltaire, 18–19, 31–32
   writes Discours sur les arts et les sciences, 20–23, 171
   controversy over Discours, 23–24
   success of Le Devin du village, 24–25
   refuses King’s invitation, 25
   writes for Encyclopédie, 25
   writes Dictionnaire de la musique, 25–26
   writes Lettre sur la musique française, 25–26
   Narcisse performed, 27
   quarrels with philosophes, 27
   visits Geneva (1754), 27
   resumes friendship with philosophes, 27–28
   writes Discours sur l’origine et les fondements de inégalité parmi les hommes, 28–30
   controversy over Discours, 31–32
   “Discours sur l’économie politique” published, 32–33, 171
   friendship with Grimm, 33–36
   meets Mme. d’Épinay, 36
   leaves Paris for Hermitage, 36–37
   IN HERMITAGE (1756–57): Rousseau’s arrival, 36–37
   family problems, 152
   writings, 154–55
   love affairs, 156–59
   conflicts with friends, 153–55, 158–61
   aid from philosophes, 153
   leaves Hermitage, 161
   IN MÔTIERS-TRAVERS (1757–62): poverty, 161–62
   relation with Maréchal de Luxembourg, 161–62
   break with friends, 162–65
   conflict with philosophes, 164–65, 170
   PERSECUTION OF (1762–67): clerical attacks on books, 185, 189, 192–99
   philosophes attack Émile, 189
   arrest ordered by Paris Parlement, 189
   flees to Switzerland, 189
   Émile and Social Contract banned, 190
   arrest ordered by Geneva Council of Twenty-five, 190
   Voltaire’s sympathy for Rousseau, 190–91, 199–200
   expelled from Bern, 191, 206–7
   appeal to Frederick the Great, 191–92
   residence near Neuchâtel, 191–92
   conflict with Archbishop of Paris, 193–97
   conflict with Genevan Calvinista, 197–99
   conflict with Voltaire, 200–1
   meetings with Boswell, 201–4
   writes constitution for Corsica, 204–5
   leaves Môtiers-Travers for Île de St.-Pierre, 206
   leaves Île de St.-Pierre for Paris, 207–9
   leaves Paris for England, 209
   meets Hume, 207
   Boswell brings Thérèse to London, 210
   IN ENGLAND (1766–67): stay in London, 209–10
   residence in Chiswick and Wootton, 210–212
   dislike for England, 214
   return to France, 214
   LATER YEARS OF (1767–78): returns to France, 881
   wanderings in France, 882
   in Paris, 883–86
   readings from Confessions, 883–84
   works on constitution for Poland, 884–85
   writes Dialogues, 885–86
   writes Rêveries d’un promeneur solitaire, 886
   death of, 886
   rumors and attacks against, 887
   aftermath of death, 887
   conflicts with philosophes, 882–83, 885
   Voltaire and, 882, 884, 886
   fears and suspicions of, 882–84
   mourns loss of children, 882, 886
   restraints placed on readings, 884
   political conservatism of, 884
   DIDEROT AND, 22, 24, 27, 153, 201, 212
   confllcts between them, 3, 4, 5*, 25, 153, 158, 159–60
   Diderot encourages Rousseau to write first Discours, 20
   Diderot  
					     					 			reproves Rousseau, 25, 892–93
   final rupture in relations, 162–63
   financial aid to Rousseau, 153
   first meeting between, 15–16
   repudiation by Rousseau, 3
   Rousseau on Diderot, 15
   suspicions of Rousseau against, 4, 5*
   EDUCATIONAL THEORIES OF, 3, 644
   in Émile, see Émile
   emphasis on freedom, 179–80
   instruction of Mably children, 14
   moral instruction, 180
   physical training, 180–81
   rearing of girls, 180
   religious instruction, 182–85
   role of instincts, 181
   role of nature, 180–81
   sex education, 185–86
   RELIGION AND, 3, 162–63
   accepted by clergy, 890
   advice to women on religion, 193
   belief in afterlife, 184
   on Biblical miracles, 198
   calls for “civil religion,” 175
   Calvinism and, 5–6, 19, 26, 177, 184–85
   Catholicism and, 7
   denounces atheism, 26
   denunciation of atheism, 183
   early pantheism, 13–14
   Genevan creed of, 184–85
   religious tolerance, 175–76
   SOCIAL VIEWS OF: agriculture, 205
   attacks nobility, 17
   attacks social inequality, 17, 28–30
   attitude toward “enlightened despots,” 173
   concept of general will, 32–33; 172
   in constitution for Corsica, 205
   criticism of civilization, 19–24
   democracy, 173–74, 205
   equalitarianism, 141
   family life, 205
   Geneva as model, 27
   ideal type of government, 173, 205
   justifies revolution, 30
   justifies social inequality, 32
   for limitations on democracy, 28, 32
   private property, 29–30, 32, 174, 205
   radicalism of, 176, 205
   republican ideals, 898
   socialism, 174
   taxation, 174
   views on law, 172–73
   VOLTAIRE AND, 108, 149, 151, 203–4, 212, 882, 884, 886
   attitude toward Julie and Émile, 149, 182
   both men compared, 172, 175, 201, 518
   conflicts between them, 163–65, 200–1, 214
   correspondence between them, 154–55
   Rousseau on Voltaire’s poetry, 154
   Voltaire on Rousseau’s Julie, 170
   —on Social Contract, 177
   Rousseau, Pierre (1750–c. 1792), 910
   Rousseau, Suzanne, nee Bernard (d. 1712), mother of jean-Jacques, 5
   Rousseau juge de Jean-Jaques, see Dialogues
   Rovigo, 229
   Rowlandson, Thomas (1756–1827), 750
   Rowley, Thomas, “myth” of, 809
   Royal Academy of Arts, London, 645, 750, 751, 756
   Royal Academy of Belles-Lettres, Swedish, 658–59
   Royal Academy of Fine Arts, Swedish, 658
   Royal Academy of History, Portuguese, 260
   Royal Academy of Sciences, Swedish, 658
   Royal Society of Edinburgh, 763
   Rozier, Pilâtre, de, see Pilâtre de Rozier, Jean-François
   Rudbeck, Governor-General (fl. 1782), 656
   Ruffey, Sophie de, see Monnier, Marquise de
   Ruggiero (Hasse), 387
   Ruines, ou Méditations sur les révolutions des empires (Volney), 917
   Rukh, Shah, see Shah Rukh
   rum, American trade in, 57
   Rumiantsev, Piotr Alexandrovich (1725–96), 458, 460
   Russia, 89, 353, 422–71
   architecture in, 426, 432, 467–69
   army in, 432, 438, 441–42, 459, 686
   art in, 426, 432, 466–69
   Austria and, 349, 362–63, 432
   bureaucratic corruption in, 424
   clergy and religion in, 424–25, 438, 451–52
   clothing and dress in, 425
   commerce and industry in, 423, 455–56
   conflicts with Turkey, 140, 411, 414–15, 430, 457–61, 470, 483, 663
   Denmark and, 456
   Diderot in, 892
   education in, 432, 453
   England and, 432, 458, 460–61, 700
   Enlightenment in, 426–27, 432, 446–50
   expansion of empire, 429–30, 457–61, 470, 653
   feudalism in, 424, 451, 454–55
   Finland and, 456, 654–55
   France and, 430, 432, 457–58, 469–70
   Freemasons in, 465
   French cultural influence in, 450, 467
   government in, 424, 431, 459–60
   influence of Germans in, 429
   Italian opera in, 224
   Jews in, 452, 632–33, 641
   legal reforms in, 431, 450–52, 470
   literature in, 426–28, 463–66, 889
   minorities in, 422, 452
   music in, 224, 425–26, 466
   palace coups in, 431, 439–40
   philosophes and, 140
   Poland and, 430, 456, 470, 474, 479–84, 487–92
   Prussia and, 456, 460–61, 484
   public health and medicine in, 453–54
   reign of Anna Ivanovna (1730–40), 429–30
   reign of Catherine I (1725–27), 429
   reign of Catherine II, see Catherine II the Great; reign of Elizabeth Petrovna (1741–62), 431–437
   reign of Peter II (1727–30), 429
   reign of Peter III (1762), 432–40
   religious toleration in, 438, 451–52
   size and geography of, 422, 470
   social classes in, 142, 422–25, 429–30, 438, 443, 451, 454–56, 469–70
   Sweden and, 456, 458, 460, 653–54
   taxation in, 424, 470
   torture abolished in, 321
   war with Persia (1722–23), 419
   Westernization of, 470–71
   IN SEVEN YEARS’ WAR (1756–63): 432, 438, 456
   Brandenburg ravaged by, 54
   coalition against Frederick II, 60
   difficulties in East Prussia, 49
   diplomacy leading to, 39–44
   invasions of East Prussia, 48, 53, 55
   occupation of Berlin, 60
   results of war, 63
   withdraws from war, 61
   FOREIGN ALLIANCES AND AGREEMENTS OF, 457–58
   Conventions of St. Petersburg (1757), 45
   in Declaration of Armed Neutrality (1780), 713
   Peace of Jassy (1792), 488
   treaty with England (1755), 39
   Russian Orthodox Church, 422, 424–25, 452
   Sabbatai Zevi (1626–76), 635–36
   Sacchetti, Giovanni Battista (fl. 1737–64), 297
   Sacchini, Antonio (1730–86), 333–34
   Sacharissa (Lady Dorothy Sidney; 1617–84), 790
   Sade, Comte Donatien-Alphonse-François de (1740–1814), 904
   Safavid dynasty, 417
   St. Andrews University, 763
   St.-Antoine, Faubourg, 962
   Saint-Aubin, Gabriel de (1724–80), 116*
   St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre, 93
   St.-Cloud, Abbey of, 928
   St.-Cyr (school), 453
   St.-Domingue, 58, 89, 935
   Sainte-Beuve, Charles Augustin (1804–69), 5*, 34, 127, 648, 793, 805
   Ste.-Geneviève, Church of, 880
   Ste.-Marguerite district in Paris, 956
   Saint-Évremond, Charles de Marguetel de Saint-Denis, Seigneur de (d. 1703), 125
   St. Gallen, 643
   Saint-Germain, Claude-Louis de (1707–78), 858
   Saint-Hilaire, Geoffroy, see Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, Étienne
   St. James Chronicle, 212
   St. James’s Palace, 745
   Saint-Lambert, Marquis Jean-François de (1716–1803), 26, 27, 104, 156–57, 163, 168, 908
   in Mlle. Lespinasse’s salon, 126
   at Mme.  
					     					 			Geoffrin’s salon, 120
   Rousseau and, 164, 207
   St. Lawrence River, French control of, 57
   St.-Lazare, Monastery of, 962
   Saint-Mauris, M. de (fl. 1775), 952
   St. Petersburg, 423–24, 469
   St. Petersburg, Convention of (1757), 45
   Saint-Pierre, Abbé de (Charles-Irénée Castel; 1658–1743), 153, 547, 643
   St.-Rémy de Valois, Comtesse Jeanne de, 942
   Saisons, Les (Saint-Lambert), 104
   Salamanca, University of, 294
   Saldanha, Cardinal de (fl. 1758), patriarch of Lisbon, 264
   Salieri, Antonio (1750–1825), 334–35, 466
   Salle des Menus Plaisirs, 956–57, 959–60
   Salm, Hôtel, 190
   Salomon, Johann Peter (1745–1815), 377
   salons: in England, 729
   in France, 103, 118–31, 906–8
   in Italy, 219
   Saltykov, Count Piotr Semionovich (1698?–1772), 54–55, 59, 435
   Saltykov, Sergei (fl. 1751), 436
   Salvi, Niccolò (1697–1751), 247
   Salzburg, 382
   Samarra, battle of (1733), 418–19
   Sammartini, Giovanni Battista (1701–75), 221, 226–27, 380–81, 386
   Sancho Pança (Philidor), 100
   Sanctis, Francesco de, 247
   Sand, George (Aurore Dupin; 1803–76), 889
   Sandby, Paul (1725–1809), 750
   Sandwich, Edward Montagu, 1st Earl of (1625–1672), 730
   Sandwich, John Montagu, 4th Earl of (1718–1792), 703, 729
   San Fernando, 288
   San Ildefonso, 288
   San Ildefonso, Palace of, 297
   San Marino, 217
   Sansedoni, Porzia (fl. 1765), 782
   Santa Maria del Rosario, 238
   Santa Maria Maggiore, 247
   Santiago de Compostela, cathedral of, 297
   Santissima Trinità dei Monti, 247
   Saragossa, 275
   Saratoga, battle of (1777), 713, 869
   Saratov, 455
   Sardinia, 246, 273, 277, 644
   Sartine, Gabriel de (1729–1801), 858, 868
   Satires (Naruszewicz), 485
   saturnalia, 232
   Saudi Arabia, 412
   Saul (Alfieri), 340
   Saul (Voltaire), 136
   Saurau, Count Franz von (1760–c. 1830), 379
   Saussure, Horace-Bénédict de (1740–99), 645
   Savage, Richard (1697?–1743), 820
   Savery, Thomas (1650?–1715), 674
   Savile, Sir George (1726–84), 735
   Savoy, 217, 277
   Genoa and, 227
   territorial acquisition from War of the Spanish Succession, 273
   Savoy, house of, 226
   Saxe, Maréchal Comte Hermann Maurice de (1696–1750), 99, 107
   Saxe-Gotha, Duke of, 893
   Saxe-Hildburghausen, Duke of, 49–50
   Saxe-Meiningen, Duke of, 594
   Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, 503
   in League of Princes (1785), 362; see also Weimar
   Saxony, 356, 476, 502–3