Auguste Vitu


Auguste-Charles-Joseph Vitu was a 19th-century French journalist and writer.

Biography

The natural son of a Parisian rentier, Vitu began his career as a typographer-worker before becoming a journalist. In 1867 he founded and later created the newspaper L’Étendard from which he was lucky to be deposed in August 1868, before the sensational trial filed against the manager Jules Pic. He was chief editor of the Peuple Français at the request of Napoleon III from 1869.
Vitu is mostly known for his book Paris, images et traditions, reprinted several times. He also published a book on the popular jargon of the 15th century and another on Napoleon III whose style of moustache and goatee he adopted.
Auguste Vitu was in turn publisher, political and military historian, literary and theatre critic, novelist, author of finance textbooks. He collaborated with numerous Parisian newspapers and founded Le Bons sens d'Auvergne in Clermont-Ferrand and L'Ami de l'ordre in Grenoble to local policy purposes.
He is buried at Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris. The in the 15th arrondissement of Paris was named after him in 1912.

Main publications