Jean Haudry


Jean Haudry is a French linguist and Indo-Europeanist. Haudry is generally considered a distinguished linguists by other scholars, although he has been criticized for his proximity with the far-right.

Biography

Jean Haudry was born on 28 May 1934 in Le Perreux-sur-Marne, in the eastern suburbs of Paris. He became agrégé in grammar studies at the École Normale Supérieure in 1959, and earned a PhD in linguistics in 1975 after a thesis on Vedic Sanskrit grammatical cases.
From 1974–1975, he has been a member of the patronage committee of , a review published by GRECE, an ethno-nationalist think tank led by Alain de Benoist. Haudry acted as the chairman of GRECE at its 13th symposium in 1978.
Haudry was a member of the Institute of Formation of the Front National of Jean-Marie Le Pen. He also served in the "Scientific Council" of the FN until the late 1990s, when he decided to follow Bruno Mégret and his splinter party Mouvement National Républicain.
In 1980, he co-founded with GRECE members and Jean Varenne the "Institute of Indo-European Studies" at the Jean Moulin University Lyon 3. Under his leadership between 1982 and 1998, the IEIE published the journal Études indo-européennes. He was a professor of Sanskrit and dean of the faculty of letters at the University Lyon 3 and a directeur d'études at the 4th section of the École Pratique des Hautes Études. He became professor emeritus in 2002.
In 1995, he participated in the founding of the nativist movement Terre et Peuple, along with Pierre Vial and Jean Mabire.
Soon after Jean Haudry's retirement, the French Ministry of Education appointed a commission to investigate whether Haudry's institute was not too closely associated with the far-right. The work of the commission was mooted when Haudry's successor, Jean-Paul Allard dissolved the institute and reconstituted it as an association free from state supervision.

Indo-European Studies

Three-sky model

In his most important work, La Religion cosmique des Indo-Européens, Haudry argued that Proto-Indo-European cosmogony featured three 'skies' each having its own set of deities and colours. The proposition is often mentioned in handbooks, although it has been criticized by some scholars as an "overinterpretation" of available data.
RealmThemeDeitiesColour
DayCelestial"Daylight-sky god" white
Dawn/twilightBridging"Binder-god" red
NightNight Spirits"Night-sky god" dark

Arctic hypothesis

Haudry has supported the Arctic hypothesis of the origin of Indo-Europeans.

Works