Patrick Cothias
Born on December 31, 1948, in Paris, Patrick Cothias established himself as one of the most productive French comics writers of his generation, with a career spanning more than five decades and over 150 credited works.
Cothias came to prominence through the "Vécu" historical collection at Glénat editions, where he was a central figure from the early 1980s through 2004. The imprint specialized in rigorously researched period adventures, and Cothias proved a natural fit, developing a string of series rooted in French and European history. His most celebrated achievement is the sweeping Seven Lives of the Hawk cycle, an ambitious multi-volume saga that drew in several distinguished artists over its run, including André Juillard on titles such as *Masquerouge* and *Les Sept Vies de l'Épervier*, as well as Brice Goepfert on *Le Fou du Roy*, Jean-Paul Dethorey on *Burnt Heart*, Marc-Renier on *The Iron Mask*, and David Prudhomme on *Ninon Secret*. Beyond that cycle, he collaborated with Philippe Adamov on *Le Vent des Dieux* and *Les Eaux de Mortelune*, and with Michel Rouge on *Les Héros cavaliers*. He also demonstrated range outside historical fiction, co-creating the contemporary thriller *Le Lièvre de March* with Antonio Parras.
From the mid-2000s onward, Cothias worked primarily with Éditions Bamboo, while Dargaud published a further volume in the Seven Lives of the Hawk cycle as recently as 2014.
Full bibliography · 38 series
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