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Antoine Laurent de Jussieu

Antoine Laurent de Jussieu (French pronunciation: ​[ɑ̃twan loʁɑ̃ də ʒysjø]; 12 April 1748 – 17 September 1836) was a French botanist, notable as the first to publish a natural classification of flowering plants; much of his system remains in use today. His classification was based on an extended unpublished work by his uncle, the botanist Bernard de Jussieu.

Antoine Laurent de Jussieu
Sketch portrait, probably by Jules Pizzetta.
Born(1748-04-12)12 April 1748
Died17 September 1836(1836-09-17) (aged 88)
NationalityFrench
Known forClassification of flowering plants
Scientific career
FieldsBotany
InstitutionsJardin des Plantes, Muséum national d'histoire naturelle
InfluencesLinnaeus, Michel Adanson, Joseph Gärtner
InfluencedRobert Brown, Georges Cuvier, A. P. de Candolle
Author abbrev. (botany)Juss.
Children
Relatives
Signature
Bust of Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu by David d'Angers (1837)

Life

Jussieu was born in Lyon, France, in 1748, as one of 10 children, to Christophle de Jussieu, an amateur botanist.[1] His father's three younger brothers were also botanists. He went to Paris in 1765 to be with his uncle Bernard and to study medicine, graduating with a doctorate in 1770, with a thesis on animal and vegetable physiology.[2] His uncle introduced him to the Jardin du Roi, where he was appointed as a botany Demonstrator and deputy to L. G. Le Monnier, professor of botany there in 1770.[3] Le Monnier had succeeded Antoine-Laurent's uncle Antoine in 1759. Lectures by eminent botanists, including the Jusssieu dynasty were popular there, especially among pharmacists.[4] His lecture on the classification of Ranunculaceae in 1773[2] to the Académie des Sciences led to his election as a member that year.[5] In 1784 he was appointed to a Royal Commission by Louis XVI, as one of five commissionaires to investigate animal magnetism, publishing a dissenting opinion from the majority,[6] suggesting further investigation was required.[7]

The publication of Jussieu's Genera plantarum in 1789 was rapidly followed by the outbreak of the French Revolution (1789–1799). Jussieu adhered to the revolutionary principles and was appointed to a position in the municipal government of Paris, where he had the task of managing all the hospitals. With the overthrow of the monarchy, the Jardin du Roi was renamed the Jardin des plantes, and Jussieu was instrumental in reorganizing the Jardin as the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle in 1790, where he became a professor of botany, holding the chair in Botanique à la campagne. He was also Director of the museum from 1794 to 1795, and again from 1798 to 1800.[8] Jussieu immediately set about setting up a herbarium, a task greatly facilitated by the seizure of foreign collections by the revolutionary armies, and by the confiscation of the assets of the church and aristocracy.[9][3] In 1808, Napoleon appointed him to the position of counsellor of the university.[5]

He remained at the museum until 1826, when he was succeeded by his son Adrien-Henri.[9] At the museum he published many papers in the museum's annals (Annales du Museum d’histoire naturelle 1802–1813)[10] and its succeeding Mémoires du Muséum d'histoire naturelle (1815–), as well as contributing articles to Frederic Cuvier's Dictionnaire des sciences naturelles (1816-1830).[11][3] He was also a member of the Masonic Lodge, Les Neuf Sœurs.

Work

 
Medallion of Jussieu by David d'Angers 1836

Jussieu's system of plant classification, based on the relative value of their characteristics, served as the basis for natural systems of taxonomy. His system was first published in a paper on Ranunculaceae in 1773.[12] The following year he developed the concept further in a paper on the arrangement of plants in the Jardin de Roi, based on the work of his uncle Bernard at the Trianon garden in Versaille. The work dealt primarily with suprafamilial ranks of classification.[13] The following five years were devoted to applying his ideas to the entire plant kingdom, culminating in his epochal work, the Genera plantarum (1789).[14] In preparing this work he had access to a large number of herbaria and botanical gardens. Although at first British and German botanists, firm adherents of the Linnaean system, were wary of what they considered radical ideas emanating from the French revolution,[5] the work soon gained wide acceptance in scientific circles, and was actively promoted by eminent botanists including Robert Brown and A. P. de Candolle.[9][3]

 
Title page of Genera plantarum 1789

In the Genera plantarum (1789), Jussieu adopted a methodology based on the use of multiple characters to define groups, an idea derived from naturalist Michel Adanson. This was a significant improvement over the "artificial" system of Linnaeus, whose most popular work classified plants into classes and orders based on the number of stamens and pistils, though Jussieu did keep Linnaeus' binomial nomenclature. He extended his uncle's ideas about the value of the characteristics of plants. These characteristics were considered to be of unequal value, with some subordinate to others in a hierarchical system. As Jusssieu put it, plant characteristics should be pesés et non comptés (weighed, not counted), in assigning each to a definite group. The names he gave to his uncle's three major groupings were Acotyledon, Monocotyledon, and Dicotyledon. These were then divided into fifteen classes and one hundred families.[5] The most important features of the Genera plantarum are the division into groups and the description and circumscription of the 100 families (ordines naturales).[15] With the resumption of his scientific work at the museum, Jussieu's publications (some 60 memoirs)[16] largely dealt with further elaborating the principles of the Genera plantarum and more detailed circumscription and description of the families he had named, work that was very much influenced by Joseph Gärtner.[5][3] Although he worked on a second edition of Genera plantarum, all that was published was his Introductio,[17] posthumously in 1837.[5]

List of selected publications

Sources: Flourens (1840, p. lvii); Pritzel (1872); Royal Society (1800–1900)Stafleu & Cowan (1979)

  • 1770 : Jussieu, Antoine (1770). An aeconomiam animalem inter et vegetalem analogiae ou Comparaison de la structure et des fonctions des organes végétaux avec les phénomènes de la vie animale (Doctor of medicine). Faculté de médecine de Paris.
  • 1773 : — (1777). "Examen de la famille des renonculacées". Histoire de l'Académie royale des sciences 1773 (in French): 214–240.(also available here)
  • 1774 : — (1778). "Exposition d'un nouvel ordre de plantes adopté dans les démonstrations du Jardin royal". Histoire de l'Académie royale des sciences 1774 (in French): 175–179.
  • 1784 : — (1784). Rapport de l'un des commissaires chargés par le Roi de l'examen du magnétisme animal [Report of one of the commissioners charged by the King with the examination of animal magnetism] (in French). Paris: Veuve Hérissant.
  • 1789 : Jussieu, Antoine Laurent de (1789). Genera plantarum: secundum ordines naturales disposita, juxta methodum in Horto regio parisiensi exaratam, anno M.DCC.LXXIV [Genera of Plants Arranged According to Their Natural Orders, Based on the Method Devised in the Royal Garden in Paris in the Year 1774] (in Latin). Paris. OCLC 5161409.(translated into French, with revisions, by Ventenat (1799) as Tableau du règne végétal selon la méthode de Jussieu)
  • Jussieu, Antoine Laurent de (1964). "Introduction". In Stafleu, Frans Antonie (ed.). Genera Plantarum. Historiæ naturalis classica XXXV. Weinheim: J. Cramer. pp. vi–xlvii. ISBN 0-85486-061-4.
  • 1804: Jussieu, Antoine Laurent de (1804). "Memoire sur le cantua, genre de plantes de la famille des Polemoniees". Annales du Muséum d'histoire naturelle (in French). 3: 113–119.
  • 1810: Jussieu, Antoine Laurent de (1810). "Memoire sur les genres de plantes à ajouter ou retrancher aux familles des Solanées, Borraginées, Convolulacées, Polemoniacées, Bignoniées, Gentianées, Apocinées, Sapotées et Ardisiacées". Annales du Muséum d'histoire naturelle (in French). 15: 336–356.
  • 1824: Jussieu, Antoine Laurent de (1824). Principes de la méthode naturelle des végétaux (in French). Paris: F.G. Levrault., reprinted from F. Cuvier, ed., Dictionnaire des sciences naturelles,[11] 30: 426–468 (1824)
  • 1837 : Jussieu, Antoine (1837). "Introductio in historiam plantarum". Annales des Sciences Naturelles (in Latin). 8: 97–160, 193–239.(Reprinted in Brongniart (1837, pp. 1–111)) op. post.
Recurrent publications
  • Notice historique sur le Museum d’histoire naturelle, in Annales du Museum d’histoire naturelle, 1 (1802), 1–14; 2 (1803), 1–16; 3 (1804), 1–17; 4 (1804), 1–19; 6 (1805), 1-20; 11 (1808), 1-41

Awards and memberships

Member of the French Académie des Sciences (1773), elected foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (1788).

Legacy

 
Place Jussieu, Paris

Jussieu's "natural" system of classification soon replaced the artificial sexual one of Linnaeus.[18] The system of suprageneric nomenclature in botany is officially dated to 4 Aug 1789 with the publication of the Genera Plantarum (Gen. Pl.).[19] The Genera plantarum was far-reaching in its impact; many of the present-day plant families are still attributed to Jussieu. Morton's 1981 History of botanical science counts 76 of Jussieu's families conserved in the ICBN, versus just 11 for Linnaeus, for instance. Writing of the natural system, Sydney Howard Vines remarked:

"The glory of this crowning achievement belongs to Jussieu: he was the capable man who appeared precisely at the psychological moment, and it is the men that so appear who have made, and will continue to make, all the great generalisations of science."[20]

 
Jussieu by Héral in Jardin des Plantes

De Jussieu and his family have been commemorated by a number of images, including a bust and medallion by David d'Angers (Pierre-Jean David), upon his death. A statue of Jussieu, commissioned for 10,000 Fr by Jean-François Legendre-Héral in 1842, stands in the Galerie de Botanique of the Jardin des Plantes. Another, by Jean-Baptiste Gustave Deloye is on the balustrade of the Natural History Museum, Vienna (facing Maria-Theresien-Platz).[21] The Jussieu botanical dynasty is commemorated in the neighbourhood of the Jardin des Plantes by the Place Jussieu, (Quartier Saint-Victor, 5th arrondissement) Rue Jussieu, the Jussieu metro station and the Jussieu science campus of the University of Paris.[a] The Jussieu family are also commemorated by street names in Marseilles and Lyon, their family home. The Jussieu Peninsula in South Australia is also named after Antoine Laurent Jussieu, as is an asteroid.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Place Jussieu: Created in 1838 as Place Saint-Victor, and renamed in 1867, between Rue Jussieu and Rue Linné, thus commemorating two botanists, adjacent to the Jussieu campus[22][23]

References

Bibliography

Books

Historical sources

  • Brongniart, Adolphe (1837). Notice historique sur Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu (in French). Paris}.(Reprinted from Annales des sciences naturelles. Botanique, 2nd series, VII January 1837, p. 5)
  • Du Mortier, Barthélemy (1862–1873). Opuscules de botanique (in French). Brussels: G. Mayolez.(also at Google Books here)
  • Cuvier, Frédéric, ed. (1816–1845). Dictionnaire des sciences naturelles, dans lequel on traite méthodiquement des différens êtres de la nature, considérés soit en eux-mêmes, d'après l'état actuel de nos connoissances, soit relativement à l'utilité qu'en peuvent retirer la médecine, l'agriculture, le commerce et les artes. Suivi d'une biographie des plus célèbres naturalistes. 61 vols (in French). Paris: F. G. Levrault.
  • Lazare, Félix; Lazare, Louis (1855) [1844]. Dictionnaire administratif et historique des rues de Paris et de ses monuments (in French) (2nd ed.). Paris: Bureau de revue municipale.(see Dictionnaire administratif et historique des rues de Paris et de ses monuments)
  • Pritzel, G. A. (1872). Thesaurus literaturae botanicae omnium gentium,inde a rerum botanicarum initiis ad nostra usque tempora, quindecim millia operum recensens. Lipsiae: F. A. Brockhaus. p. 160.
  • Rádl, Emanuel (1909–1913). Geschichte der biologischen Theorien in der Neuzeit (in German) (2nd ed.). Leipzig: Verlag von W. Engelmann.
  • Sachs, Julius von (1890) [1875]. Geschichte der Botanik vom 16. Jahrhundert bis 1860 [History of botany (1530-1860)]. translated by Henry E. F. Garnsey, revised by Isaac Bayley Balfour. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.30585., (see also History of botany (1530-1860) at Google Books)
  • Annales du Muséum d'histoire naturelle. 21 vols. Paris: G. Dufour. 1802–1827.
  • Royal Society (1800–1900). "Jussieu, Ant. Laur. de.". Catalogue of scientific papers. 17 vols. Vol. 3 (1800-1863) GRE–LEZ 1869. Eyre & Spottiswoode. pp. 596–598.(also here at Google Books. See also Catalogue of Scientific Papers)

Articles

  • Brongniart, Adolphe (1837a). "Notice historique sur Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu". Annales des sciences naturelles. Botanique. 2nd series VIII: 5–24.(Reprinted in Brongniart (1837))
  • Duveen, Denis I.; Klickstein, Herbert S. (December 1955). "Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790) and Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743–1794): Part II. Joint investigations". Annals of Science. 11 (4): 271–302. doi:10.1080/00033795500200295.
  • Flourens, Pierre (1840). "Éloge historique d'Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu 1838". Mémoires de l'Académie (royale) des sciences de l'Institut (imperial) de France. XVII: i–lx.(Reprint available in Google Books)
  • Burdet, H M (1976). "Cartulae ad botanicorum graphicem VIII". Candollea (in French). 31 (1): 127–158.
  • Guédès, Michel (May 1973). "Duchesne, Buisson, Durande, early followers of the natural method of the Jussieus". Taxon. 22 (2–3): 211–219. doi:10.2307/1218125. JSTOR 1218125.
  • Lacroix, Alfred (1941). "Notice historique sur les cinq de Jussieu, membres de l'Académie des sciences (1712-1853), leur rôle d'animateurs des recherches d'histoire naturelle dans les colonies françaises, leurs principaux correspondants: lue en la séance publique annuelle du 21 décembre 1936". Mémoires de l'Académie des Sciences de l'Institut de France (in French). 2nd series 63: 34–47.
  • Meerow, Alan W.; Reveal, James L.; Snijman, Deirdre A.; Dutilh, Julie H. (November 2007). "(1793) Proposal to conserve the name Amaryllidaceae against Alliaceae, a "superconservation" proposal". Taxon. 56 (4): 1299–1300. doi:10.2307/25065925. JSTOR 25065925.

Encyclopaedias

Websites

  • "La place Jussieu - Paris 5e - Faculté Jussieu - Paris Diderot - Le Quartier Latin". Paris 1900 l'art nouveau. January 2005.
  • van der Krogt, René; van der Krogt, Peter (2021). "Wien - Fassadenstatuen des Naturhistorisches Museums (Façade statues on the Museum of Natural History)". Statues - Hither & Thither. Retrieved 6 September 2021.

External links

  • List of publications at Biodiversity Heritage Library

antoine, laurent, jussieu, other, members, family, jussieu, family, french, pronunciation, twan, loʁɑ, ʒysjø, april, 1748, september, 1836, french, botanist, notable, first, publish, natural, classification, flowering, plants, much, system, remains, today, cla. For other members of the family see De Jussieu family Antoine Laurent de Jussieu French pronunciation ɑ twan loʁɑ de ʒysjo 12 April 1748 17 September 1836 was a French botanist notable as the first to publish a natural classification of flowering plants much of his system remains in use today His classification was based on an extended unpublished work by his uncle the botanist Bernard de Jussieu Antoine Laurent de JussieuSketch portrait probably by Jules Pizzetta Born 1748 04 12 12 April 1748Lyon Kingdom of FranceDied17 September 1836 1836 09 17 aged 88 Paris July MonarchyNationalityFrenchKnown forClassification of flowering plantsScientific careerFieldsBotanyInstitutionsJardin des Plantes Museum national d histoire naturelleInfluencesLinnaeus Michel Adanson Joseph GartnerInfluencedRobert Brown Georges Cuvier A P de CandolleAuthor abbrev botany Juss ChildrenAdrien Henri de Jussieu Son RelativesAntoine de Jussieu Uncle Bernard de Jussieu Uncle Joseph de Jussieu Uncle SignatureBust of Antoine Laurent de Jussieu by David d Angers 1837 Contents 1 Life 2 Work 2 1 List of selected publications 3 Awards and memberships 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 8 1 Books 8 1 1 Historical sources 8 2 Articles 8 3 Encyclopaedias 8 4 Websites 9 External linksLife EditJussieu was born in Lyon France in 1748 as one of 10 children to Christophle de Jussieu an amateur botanist 1 His father s three younger brothers were also botanists He went to Paris in 1765 to be with his uncle Bernard and to study medicine graduating with a doctorate in 1770 with a thesis on animal and vegetable physiology 2 His uncle introduced him to the Jardin du Roi where he was appointed as a botany Demonstrator and deputy to L G Le Monnier professor of botany there in 1770 3 Le Monnier had succeeded Antoine Laurent s uncle Antoine in 1759 Lectures by eminent botanists including the Jusssieu dynasty were popular there especially among pharmacists 4 His lecture on the classification of Ranunculaceae in 1773 2 to the Academie des Sciences led to his election as a member that year 5 In 1784 he was appointed to a Royal Commission by Louis XVI as one of five commissionaires to investigate animal magnetism publishing a dissenting opinion from the majority 6 suggesting further investigation was required 7 The publication of Jussieu s Genera plantarum in 1789 was rapidly followed by the outbreak of the French Revolution 1789 1799 Jussieu adhered to the revolutionary principles and was appointed to a position in the municipal government of Paris where he had the task of managing all the hospitals With the overthrow of the monarchy the Jardin du Roi was renamed the Jardin des plantes and Jussieu was instrumental in reorganizing the Jardin as the Museum national d histoire naturelle in 1790 where he became a professor of botany holding the chair in Botanique a la campagne He was also Director of the museum from 1794 to 1795 and again from 1798 to 1800 8 Jussieu immediately set about setting up a herbarium a task greatly facilitated by the seizure of foreign collections by the revolutionary armies and by the confiscation of the assets of the church and aristocracy 9 3 In 1808 Napoleon appointed him to the position of counsellor of the university 5 He remained at the museum until 1826 when he was succeeded by his son Adrien Henri 9 At the museum he published many papers in the museum s annals Annales du Museum d histoire naturelle 1802 1813 10 and its succeeding Memoires du Museum d histoire naturelle 1815 as well as contributing articles to Frederic Cuvier s Dictionnaire des sciences naturelles 1816 1830 11 3 He was also a member of the Masonic Lodge Les Neuf Sœurs Work Edit Medallion of Jussieu by David d Angers 1836 Jussieu s system of plant classification based on the relative value of their characteristics served as the basis for natural systems of taxonomy His system was first published in a paper on Ranunculaceae in 1773 12 The following year he developed the concept further in a paper on the arrangement of plants in the Jardin de Roi based on the work of his uncle Bernard at the Trianon garden in Versaille The work dealt primarily with suprafamilial ranks of classification 13 The following five years were devoted to applying his ideas to the entire plant kingdom culminating in his epochal work the Genera plantarum 1789 14 In preparing this work he had access to a large number of herbaria and botanical gardens Although at first British and German botanists firm adherents of the Linnaean system were wary of what they considered radical ideas emanating from the French revolution 5 the work soon gained wide acceptance in scientific circles and was actively promoted by eminent botanists including Robert Brown and A P de Candolle 9 3 Title page of Genera plantarum 1789 In the Genera plantarum 1789 Jussieu adopted a methodology based on the use of multiple characters to define groups an idea derived from naturalist Michel Adanson This was a significant improvement over the artificial system of Linnaeus whose most popular work classified plants into classes and orders based on the number of stamens and pistils though Jussieu did keep Linnaeus binomial nomenclature He extended his uncle s ideas about the value of the characteristics of plants These characteristics were considered to be of unequal value with some subordinate to others in a hierarchical system As Jusssieu put it plant characteristics should be peses et non comptes weighed not counted in assigning each to a definite group The names he gave to his uncle s three major groupings were Acotyledon Monocotyledon and Dicotyledon These were then divided into fifteen classes and one hundred families 5 The most important features of the Genera plantarum are the division into groups and the description and circumscription of the 100 families ordines naturales 15 With the resumption of his scientific work at the museum Jussieu s publications some 60 memoirs 16 largely dealt with further elaborating the principles of the Genera plantarum and more detailed circumscription and description of the families he had named work that was very much influenced by Joseph Gartner 5 3 Although he worked on a second edition of Genera plantarum all that was published was his Introductio 17 posthumously in 1837 5 List of selected publications Edit Sources Flourens 1840 p lvii Pritzel 1872 Royal Society 1800 1900 Stafleu amp Cowan 1979 1770 Jussieu Antoine 1770 An aeconomiam animalem inter et vegetalem analogiae ou Comparaison de la structure et des fonctions des organes vegetaux avec les phenomenes de la vie animale Doctor of medicine Faculte de medecine de Paris 1773 1777 Examen de la famille des renonculacees Histoire de l Academie royale des sciences 1773 in French 214 240 also available here 1774 1778 Exposition d un nouvel ordre de plantes adopte dans les demonstrations du Jardin royal Histoire de l Academie royale des sciences 1774 in French 175 179 1784 1784 Rapport de l un des commissaires charges par le Roi de l examen du magnetisme animal Report of one of the commissioners charged by the King with the examination of animal magnetism in French Paris Veuve Herissant 1789 Jussieu Antoine Laurent de 1789 Genera plantarum secundum ordines naturales disposita juxta methodum in Horto regio parisiensi exaratam anno M DCC LXXIV Genera of Plants Arranged According to Their Natural Orders Based on the Method Devised in the Royal Garden in Paris in the Year 1774 in Latin Paris OCLC 5161409 translated into French with revisions by Ventenat 1799 as Tableau du regne vegetal selon la methode de Jussieu Jussieu Antoine Laurent de 1964 Introduction In Stafleu Frans Antonie ed Genera Plantarum Historiae naturalis classica XXXV Weinheim J Cramer pp vi xlvii ISBN 0 85486 061 4 1804 Jussieu Antoine Laurent de 1804 Memoire sur le cantua genre de plantes de la famille des Polemoniees Annales du Museum d histoire naturelle in French 3 113 119 1810 Jussieu Antoine Laurent de 1810 Memoire sur les genres de plantes a ajouter ou retrancher aux familles des Solanees Borraginees Convolulacees Polemoniacees Bignoniees Gentianees Apocinees Sapotees et Ardisiacees Annales du Museum d histoire naturelle in French 15 336 356 1824 Jussieu Antoine Laurent de 1824 Principes de la methode naturelle des vegetaux in French Paris F G Levrault reprinted from F Cuvier ed Dictionnaire des sciences naturelles 11 30 426 468 1824 1837 Jussieu Antoine 1837 Introductio in historiam plantarum Annales des Sciences Naturelles in Latin 8 97 160 193 239 Reprinted in Brongniart 1837 pp 1 111 op post Recurrent publicationsNotice historique sur le Museum d histoire naturelle in Annales du Museum d histoire naturelle 1 1802 1 14 2 1803 1 16 3 1804 1 17 4 1804 1 19 6 1805 1 20 11 1808 1 41Awards and memberships EditMember of the French Academie des Sciences 1773 elected foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences 1788 Legacy Edit Place Jussieu ParisJussieu s natural system of classification soon replaced the artificial sexual one of Linnaeus 18 The system of suprageneric nomenclature in botany is officially dated to 4 Aug 1789 with the publication of the Genera Plantarum Gen Pl 19 The Genera plantarum was far reaching in its impact many of the present day plant families are still attributed to Jussieu Morton s 1981 History of botanical science counts 76 of Jussieu s families conserved in the ICBN versus just 11 for Linnaeus for instance Writing of the natural system Sydney Howard Vines remarked The glory of this crowning achievement belongs to Jussieu he was the capable man who appeared precisely at the psychological moment and it is the men that so appear who have made and will continue to make all the great generalisations of science 20 Jussieu by Heral in Jardin des Plantes De Jussieu and his family have been commemorated by a number of images including a bust and medallion by David d Angers Pierre Jean David upon his death A statue of Jussieu commissioned for 10 000 Fr by Jean Francois Legendre Heral in 1842 stands in the Galerie de Botanique of the Jardin des Plantes Another by Jean Baptiste Gustave Deloye is on the balustrade of the Natural History Museum Vienna facing Maria Theresien Platz 21 The Jussieu botanical dynasty is commemorated in the neighbourhood of the Jardin des Plantes by the Place Jussieu Quartier Saint Victor 5th arrondissement Rue Jussieu the Jussieu metro station and the Jussieu science campus of the University of Paris a The Jussieu family are also commemorated by street names in Marseilles and Lyon their family home The Jussieu Peninsula in South Australia is also named after Antoine Laurent Jussieu as is an asteroid See also EditDe Jussieu system History of botany Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism Category Taxa named by Antoine Laurent de JussieuThe standard author abbreviation Juss is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 24 Notes Edit Place Jussieu Created in 1838 as Place Saint Victor and renamed in 1867 between Rue Jussieu and Rue Linne thus commemorating two botanists adjacent to the Jussieu campus 22 23 References Edit Burdet 1976 a b Jussieu 1770 a b c d e Stafleu 2019 Hahn 1971 p 87 a b c d e f Rompel 1910 Jussieu 1784 Duveen amp Klickstein 1955 Jaussaud amp Brygoo 2004 pp 41 45 a b c Promeet 2021 Ann Mus Hist Nat Paris 1802 1827 a b Cuvier 1816 1845 Jussieu 1777 Jussieu 1778 Jussieu 1789 Jussieu 1964 Chisholm 1911 Jussieu 1837 Isely 1994 Meerow et al 2007 Vines 1913 van der Krogt amp van der Krogt 2021 Lazare amp Lazare 1855 p 456 Paris 1900 2005 International Plant Names Index Juss Bibliography EditBooks Edit Hahn Roger 1971 The Anatomy of a Scientific Institution The Paris Academy of Sciences 1666 1803 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 01818 1 Isely Duane 1994 One Hundred and One Botanists Ames Iowa State University Press pp 118 120 ISBN 0 8138 2498 2 Jaussaud Philippe Brygoo Edouard Raoul eds 2004 Du Jardin au Museum en 516 biographies in French Museum national d histoire naturelle ISBN 978 2 85653 565 3 Open Access Stafleu Frans A Cowan Richard S 1979 Jussieu Antoine Laurent de 1748 1836 Taxonomic literature a selective guide to botanical publications and collections with dates commentaries and types 15 vol Vol 2 H Le 2nd ed Utrecht Bohn Scheltema amp Holkema pp 477 479 ISBN 9789031302246 Stevens Peter Francis 2013 The Development of Biological Systematics Antoine Laurent de Jussieu Nature and the Natural System Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231515085 Vines Sydney Howard 1913 Robert Morison 1620 1683 and John Ray 1627 1705 In Oliver Francis Wall ed Makers of British botany Cambridge University Press pp 8 43 Morton Alan G 1981 History of Botanical Science An Account of the Development of Botany from Ancient Times to the Present Day Academic Press ISBN 0 12 508380 7 available here at Internet Archive Historical sources Edit Brongniart Adolphe 1837 Notice historique sur Antoine Laurent de Jussieu in French Paris Reprinted from Annales des sciences naturelles Botanique 2nd series VII January 1837 p 5 Du Mortier Barthelemy 1862 1873 Opuscules de botanique in French Brussels G Mayolez also at Google Books here Cuvier Frederic ed 1816 1845 Dictionnaire des sciences naturelles dans lequel on traite methodiquement des differens etres de la nature consideres soit en eux memes d apres l etat actuel de nos connoissances soit relativement a l utilite qu en peuvent retirer la medecine l agriculture le commerce et les artes Suivi d une biographie des plus celebres naturalistes 61 vols in French Paris F G Levrault Lazare Felix Lazare Louis 1855 1844 Dictionnaire administratif et historique des rues de Paris et de ses monuments in French 2nd ed Paris Bureau de revue municipale see Dictionnaire administratif et historique des rues de Paris et de ses monuments Pritzel G A 1872 Thesaurus literaturae botanicae omnium gentium inde a rerum botanicarum initiis ad nostra usque tempora quindecim millia operum recensens Lipsiae F A Brockhaus p 160 Radl Emanuel 1909 1913 Geschichte der biologischen Theorien in der Neuzeit in German 2nd ed Leipzig Verlag von W Engelmann Sachs Julius von 1890 1875 Geschichte der Botanik vom 16 Jahrhundert bis 1860 History of botany 1530 1860 translated by Henry E F Garnsey revised by Isaac Bayley Balfour Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 5962 bhl title 30585 see also History of botany 1530 1860 at Google Books Annales du Museum d histoire naturelle 21 vols Paris G Dufour 1802 1827 Royal Society 1800 1900 Jussieu Ant Laur de Catalogue of scientific papers 17 vols Vol 3 1800 1863 GRE LEZ 1869 Eyre amp Spottiswoode pp 596 598 also here at Google Books See also Catalogue of Scientific Papers Articles Edit Brongniart Adolphe 1837a Notice historique sur Antoine Laurent de Jussieu Annales des sciences naturelles Botanique 2nd series VIII 5 24 Reprinted in Brongniart 1837 Duveen Denis I Klickstein Herbert S December 1955 Benjamin Franklin 1706 1790 and Antoine Laurent Lavoisier 1743 1794 Part II Joint investigations Annals of Science 11 4 271 302 doi 10 1080 00033795500200295 Flourens Pierre 1840 Eloge historique d Antoine Laurent de Jussieu 1838 Memoires de l Academie royale des sciences de l Institut imperial de France XVII i lx Reprint available in Google Books Burdet H M 1976 Cartulae ad botanicorum graphicem VIII Candollea in French 31 1 127 158 Guedes Michel May 1973 Duchesne Buisson Durande early followers of the natural method of the Jussieus Taxon 22 2 3 211 219 doi 10 2307 1218125 JSTOR 1218125 Lacroix Alfred 1941 Notice historique sur les cinq de Jussieu membres de l Academie des sciences 1712 1853 leur role d animateurs des recherches d histoire naturelle dans les colonies francaises leurs principaux correspondants lue en la seance publique annuelle du 21 decembre 1936 Memoires de l Academie des Sciences de l Institut de France in French 2nd series 63 34 47 Meerow Alan W Reveal James L Snijman Deirdre A Dutilh Julie H November 2007 1793 Proposal to conserve the name Amaryllidaceae against Alliaceae a superconservation proposal Taxon 56 4 1299 1300 doi 10 2307 25065925 JSTOR 25065925 Encyclopaedias Edit Stafleu Frans A 2019 Jussieu Antoine Laurent De Dictionary of Scientific Biography Gale Retrieved 30 July 2021 Rompel Joseph 1910 De Jussieu In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 8 New York Robert Appleton Company Promeet Dutta 8 April 2021 Antoine Laurent de Jussieu French botanist Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 27 July 2021 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Jussieu De Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 593 Websites Edit La place Jussieu Paris 5e Faculte Jussieu Paris Diderot Le Quartier Latin Paris 1900 l art nouveau January 2005 van der Krogt Rene van der Krogt Peter 2021 Wien Fassadenstatuen des Naturhistorisches Museums Facade statues on the Museum of Natural History Statues Hither amp Thither Retrieved 6 September 2021 External links EditList of publications at Biodiversity Heritage Library Wikisource has original works by or about Antoine Laurent de Jussieu Wikimedia Commons has media related to Antoine Laurent de Jussieu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antoine Laurent de Jussieu amp oldid 1119313227, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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