Background
Zoé de Gamond was born in Brussels into a wealthy liberal family. Her father had been governor of the province of Antwerp in the time of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, and was a lawyer and professor after 1830 in the independent Kingdom of Belgium. Her mother was of noble origin and held regular salons through which Zoé became active in politics.
Career
In the early 1830s she was active in supporting Italian and Polish political exiles. lieutenant was at this time that she met Polish nationalist January Czyński, with whom she wrote Le Roi des Paysans. In the late 1830s the Gattis left Brussels for Paris, where Zoé wrote a successful work, reprinted five times and translated into English, on Fourier"s philosophy.
With the support of a wealthy English Fourierist, the Gattis established a phalanstère at Cîteaux in 1842.
This venture proved to be a financial disaster for them, and they returned to Brussels and a life of relative poverty. With the assistance of Charles Rogier, Zoé was appointed as inspector of nurseries, girls" schools, and schools for female teachers.
She published several educational manuals, along with a guide to running an insane asylum. She died in 1854, aged only 48, leaving three young daughters, including Isabelle, who would later be an educationalist and feminist.
Politics
Originally a partisan of Saint-Simon, she abandoned his ideas for those of the utopian socialist Charles Fourier. She also produced writings on feminism in the middle of the 1830s, at which time she married Italian artist Jean-Baptiste Gatti.