Maurice Sand
| Maurice Sand | |
|---|---|
| Maurice Sand in the 1880s | |
| Born | Jean-François-Maurice-Arnauld Dudevant 30 June 1823 Paris, France | 
| Died | 4 September 1889 (aged 66) Nohant-Vic, France | 
| Other names | Baron Dudevant | 
| Occupation(s) | Writer and artist | 
| Spouse | Lina Calamatta | 
| Children | 2 daughters | 
| Parents | 
 | 
| Relatives | Solange Dudevant (sister) | 
Jean-François-Maurice-Arnauld Dudevant, known as Baron Dudevant but better known by the pseudonym Maurice Sand (30 June 1823 – 4 September 1889), was a French writer, artist and entomologist. He studied art under Eugène Delacroix and also experimented in various other subjects, including geology and biology.
He was the elder child and only son of George Sand, a French novelist and feminist, and her husband, Baron François Casimir Dudevant. In addition to his numerous novels, he is best remembered for his monumental study of commedia dell'arte – Masques et bouffons (comédie italienne), 1860.