His mother destined him to the Church. He attended the theological seminaries in Orléans, where he studied Greek, Latin, Hebrew, and Arabic. Back in Paris, he attended lectures delivered at the Collège de France by Carl Benedict Hase, Antoine-Isaac Silvestre de Sacy and Jean-Pierre Abel-Rémusat. He was elected to the Asiatic Society in 1825. Eventually, says his son Laurent, "after five years of unceasing effort, he suddenly gave up" and burned all the material he had painfully built. From 1826 he devoted himself to the Armenian and Georgian languages, history and culture. He had found his true vocation. However, books, teachers, documents were scarce. For Armenian he was helped by Antoine-Jean Saint-Martin. For Georgian he had to create his own dictionary from the Georgian translation of the Bible, which was faithful to the Greek text.
Russia
Invited to Saint Petersburg in 1837 by Count Sergey Uvarov, president of the Imperial Academy of Sciences, he was elected a member a year later. He journeyed to the Caucasus in 1847-48. He translated — and commented on — all major medieval and early modern Georgian chroniclers and published them in seven volumes from 1849 to 1858. His magnum opus, Histoire de la Géorgie, was a long-standing authority on the history of Georgia. He also published the correspondence between the czars and the kings of Georgia from 1639 to 1770. He devoted the years 1861–1868 mainly to his series on Armenian historians, but continued to work on them until 1876. Overall, Brosset wrote over 250 works on Georgian and Armenian history and culture. He left Russia in May 1880 et and retired at his daughter's in Châtellerault. He died there a few months later, September 3. [|His son Laurent's analytic bibliography] was a major contribution to the knowledge of his life and works.
Works
Lists of works
Brosset, Laurent. Bibliographie analytique — 271 titles, not counting supplements. Alphabetical index: p. 585-704
in Bulletin de l'Académie impériale des sciences de Saint-Pétersbourg. Vol. 27, 1880, p. 1 — 237 titles
*, Saint Petersburg: Académie impériale des sciences, 1851, 494 p.
, Saint Petersburg: Académie impériale des sciences, 64 p.
Les ruines d’Ani, capitale de l'Arménie sous les rois bagratides aux Xe et XIe siècles, 2 volumes, Saint Petersburg .
in Mémoires de l'Académie Impériale des Sciences de Saint-Pétersbourg, vol. 4, issue 9, 30 p.
Collection d'historiens arméniens: dix ouvrages sur l'histoire de l'Arménie et des pays adjacents du Xe au XIXe siècle, reprinted by APA-Philo Press, 1978.