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François Huber

François Huber (2 July 1750 – 22 December 1831), also known as Francis in English publications and Franz in German publications,[2][3][4] was a Swiss entomologist who specialized in honey bees. His pioneering work was recognized all across Europe and based on thorough observation with the help of several assistants due to his blindness.

François Huber
Born2 July 1750
Died22 December 1831 (1831-12-23) (aged 81)
NationalityGenevan, then Swiss (1815)
Known forPioneer in the scientific knowledge of the life of the honey bee and its biology
Notable workNouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles
SpouseMarie Aimée Lullin
ChildrenPierre Huber
Marie Anne Huber
Jean Huber[1]
Parent

Life

Early life

François Huber was born in Geneva on 2 July 1750 in a well respected and well-off family of merchants and bankers with important ties to Geneva, Lyon and Paris.[5] The Huber family had members in the highest institutions in the local community and was linked to other prominent local families.[6] The family made significant contributions to the scientific and theological literature. His great-aunt, Marie Huber, was known as a voluminous writer on religious and theological subjects, and as the translator and epitomizer of The Spectator (Amsterdam, 3 vols., 1753). His father Jean Huber (1721–1786) was a prominent member of the coterie at Ferney.[7] He was a well known artist who left several portraits of Voltaire, who was a close friend.[5][6] He was also interested in falcons and his observations led to him publishing on the subject.[8][9]

 
Portrait of young François Huber by his father, Jean Huber

From his early childhood, Francois was instructed in the field of literature as well as natural history, a passion he shared with his father. He attended the Collège de Saussure but his health soon deteriorated. His sight started failing at the age of fifteen. His father requested the assistance of Théodore Tronchin to treat him. He sent the young Huber to the village of Stains near Paris to recover. There, he lived the simple existence of a peasant away from the pressure of the high society. The treatment was very successful for his health and he had fond recollection of the simple life there and of the hospitality throughout his life.[5]

However, his eyesight was considered incurable by the oculist Venzel and he was facing total blindness. He had however already met Marie Aimée Lullin, the daughter of the syndics of the Swiss Republic. They had both been companions during dances and had grown up together. Her father refused to consent to their union because of his blindness as he did not want his fortune to end in the hands of a blind man when his daughter inherited. However, Marie refused to abandon François and decided to wait until she was twenty-five, when she would be legally able to make that decision on her own. He could still see light and interacted with others as if he could see. He later lost his sight completely but throughout his life he would say: I have seen, I have seen with my own eyes when recalling his youth and when others described things to him.[5]

Marriage

Marie resisted the pressures from her father to not marry this disabled man. She had, however, to wait to attain her majority, 25 years old at the time, in order to marry François. She walked down to the altar with François on 28 April 1776[6] with her maternal uncle, M. Rilliet Fatio, and married François Huber. She was 25 years and 23 days old. At her side was a close friend and confidant, Louise Eléonore Brière de Candolle, Augustin Pyramus de Candolle's mother. Marie later shared this story of her marriage to the young scientist, and in later life, she would honor him and recount his life after his passing.[5]

Marie became his reader, his secretary, and his observer, and she was very attentive in order to prevent any embarrassments in public that could have occurred from his disability. This strong loving relationship was noticed by many, including Voltaire who mentioned it in his correspondence, and it was inspiration for Germaine de Staël when she described the Belmont family in her novel Delphine.[5][6]

Early research

 
François Huber's Folio Hive

He became interested in honey bees after being read the works of René de Réaumur and Charles Bonnet. He also had a conversation with the latter who was also based in Geneva. His curiosity was focused on the history of these insects. His initial desire was to verify some facts and then fill in missing information. Since he was now blind, he had to rely on the help of others. This included his wife but also his servant François Burnens, who was fully devoted to his master. François Burnens (1760–1837) was the son of peasants from Oulens-sous-Échallens from the Canton of Vaud who arrived in 1780.[10][6] Huber taught him how to observe and directed him through questioning. He leveraged his memories of his youth and the testimonials of his wife and friends.[5]

Through his "observation", he discovered that the queen bee did not mate in the hive but in the air and detailed how the timing of this event was essential. He also confirmed the discovery by A. M. Schirach that bees are able to convert eggs into queens by the use of food (royal jelly) and that worker bees can also lay eggs. He described the battles between queens, the killing of drones at the end of the summer and what happens when a queen is replaced by a newly introduced queen. He also proved that bees used their antennae to communicate. He looked at the dimensions of the cells and how they influence the shape of the insects, the way the larvae spins silk to make its cocoons. He showed that queens are oviparitous. He looked at the ways swarms formed and was the first to provide an accurate biological history of bee colonies.[5]

These observations were made using a new type of hive in which each comb had glass sides, which Huber developed; these hives were the ancestors of our modern observation hives. Until then, hives had been circular and made of straw. These new hives opened as books with each frame visible to view.[10] These allowed the team to observe the bees and follow them around. These discoveries would not have been possible without the skills and bravery of François Burnens, who was fully committed to discovering the truth. It is said that he would face the attacks of an entire hive just to learn a fact.[5]

First publication

 
Drone Organs illustrated by Pierre Huber

The results of these observations were the publication of French: Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles ('New observations on bees') in Geneva in 1792.[11] The 800-page volume was made of the letters that François had sent to Charles Bonnet, who happened to be his uncle. It was translated into English in 1806,[12] and into German.[10] It was very well received by the scientific community not just because of the discoveries but also because he had overcome such a disability. He was also welcomed by most of the academies of Europe, especially the French Academy of Sciences. It influenced other scientists, including the renowned naturalist Charles Darwin, who owned a copy and made a commentary of the book in his famous On the Origin of Species.[13] He also mentions Pierre Huber.[10][5][14]

The poet Jacques Delille in his Chant VII, Règne Animal celebrated Huber's blindness and discovery:[15][16]

Enfin, de leur hymen savant dépositaire,
L'aveugle Huber l'a vu par les regards d'autrui
Et sur ce grand problème un nouveau jour a lui.

Further research

 
Drawing by Pierre Huber for his father's book

He started studying wax and its production. It had been speculated without sufficient proof that it came from the honey. He had already explained the origin of propolis and was able to determine through observation with Burnens that wax came out from between the rings of the abdomen as laminated sheets. These initial findings were published in Premier Mémoire sur l'origine de la Cire ('First memoir on the origin of wax') in 1804.[17]

Burnens left in 1795 to go back to his village. There he got married and became a farmer along with becoming a local judge.[6] Marie-Aimée assisted Huber but he also started training his son, Pierre Huber. He started his apprenticeship with his father as an observer. He would go on to publish his own books, not on bees but on ants. With this new assistant by his side, he was able to continue his research and in 1814, published a second edition edited in part by his son. Further findings on wax were published in his second edition.[5][9] Huber was also helped by Christine Jurine, who dissected bees for him and discovered the ovaries of the working bees.[18]

He studied the damage caused by the Sphinx atropos in hives and looked into the question of smell and its importance in the hive. He also studied the respiratory system of bees. He was able to prove that bees consume oxygen like other animals. This begged the question of how they survived with such a large population in enclosed hives with only a small entrance for fresh air. He was able to prove for the first time that bees used their wings to circulate the air, creating adequate ventilation. In order to analyse the air, he worked with Jean Senebier, another Geneva scientist who was researching this question with regards to vegetables. The two became friends and they published the Mémoires sur l'Influence de l'Air et de Diverses Substances Gazeuses dans la Germination de Différentes Graines ('Memoirs on the Influence of Air and of Various Gaseous Substances on the Germination of Different Seeds') in which they demonstrated the need for oxygen in germination.[5]

Last years

Francois Huber spent his last years in Lausanne being cared for by his daughter, Marie Anne de Molin. He continued some of his research and remained curious. He was interested in the discovery of sting-less bees near Tampico in Mexico by Captain Hall. He was given some samples by Professor Prevost and later a full colony. He was said to have kept his mental capacity to the end. Those who were close to him said he was loving and beloved to the end. On December 20, he wrote to a friend:

There is a time when it is impossible to remain neglectful; it is, when separating gradually from each other, we may reveal to those we love, all that esteem, tenderness, and gratitude, have inspired us with towards them. [...] I say to you alone that resignation and serenity are blessings which have not been refused.[5]

He died two days later on 22 December 1831 in the arms of his daughter.[5][9]

Publications

  • Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles, adressé à Charles Bonnet (First Edition) published in one volume in 1792 in Geneva.[11][19] Reprinted in 1796.[20] The English translation was published in London in 1806.[12][21]
  • Mémoires sur l'Influence de l'Air et de Diverses Substances Gazeuses dans la Germination de Différentes Graines (Geneva, 1801) co-published with Jean Senebier.[22]
  • Premier Mémoire sur l'origine de la Cire (1804) [17][23]
  • Mémoire sur la construction des cellules (1804) in the Journal Nicholson and republished in 1814.[24]
  • Lettre de Mr. Huber au Prof. Pictet sur certains dangers que courent les Abeilles dans leurs ruches, et sur les moyens de les en préserver (Geneva, October 29, 1804) This is a letter that was published.[25]
  • Nouvelles Communications relatives au sphinx atropos et à l'industrie des abeilles à s'en défendre (November 27, 1804) This is a letter that was published as a follow up to the previous letter.[24][26]
  • Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles (Second Edition) published in two volumes in 1814 in Geneva and Paris. This publication was edited by his son, Pierre Huber.[27][28]
  • Lettres inédites de François Huber pour faire suite aux Nouvelles Observations (sur les Abeilles) published posthumously in 1897 in Nyon (Switzerland) by edited by Edouard Bertrand and published in La Revue Internationale d'Apiculture. These letters were sent by Huber to his young cousin Elisa de Portes who was interested in his work. She kept the letters most of her life until giving them to Mr. Bertrand to be published.[29][30]

Legacy

  • Augustin de Candolle who was a close family friend and one of the first biographer, gave François Huber's name to a genus of Brazilian trees Huberia,[31] including Huberia laurina.[5] It is a 3 metres (9.8 ft) shrub with light green fruits that grows on rocky summits with soil-filled crevices and small areas of white sand at an elevation of 1,100 metres (3,600 ft).[32]
  • A book was published in Paris in 1829 titled Fragments d'Hubert sur les abeilles with an introduction by Dr. Mayranx. It is unclear if François Huber or Pierre Huber were involved in this publication but the last name is misspelled throughout.[33]
  • A novel by Sara George The Beekeeper's Pupil was published in 2002 inspired by the team of Huber and Burnens. It is written as the fictional journal of François Burnens from his arrival at the Huber household at the age of 19 years old in 1784 to his departure 10 years later in 1794. Her novel is based on the writings of Huber but also those of Augustin de Candolle. A French version was published in 2018 in Geneva by Slatkine.[10]

François Huber has been largely forgotten not only in the Geneva local history but also in the beekeeping community in spite of his discoveries having been unchallenged for over two centuries.[10]

References

  1. ^ Lullin family tree by Lionel Rossellat - "Marie Aimée Lullin". Geneanet. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  2. ^ Lieber, Francis, ed. (1854). Encyclopædia Americana. Vol. 6. B.B. Mussey & Co. p. 458.
  3. ^ Herrick, S. B. (1875). "Sketch of the Life of Francis Huber" . Popular Science Monthly – via Wikisource.
  4. ^ Gordh, Gordon (2011). A Dictionary of Entomology. CABI. p. 708. ISBN 978-1-84593-542-9.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o De Candolle, A.P. (October 1832). "The life and writings of Francis Huber". Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal. 14: 283–296 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Saucy, Francis (19 May 2014). "Le Genevois qui mit au jour les secrets des abeilles". Le Temps.
  7. ^ Chisholm 1911.
  8. ^ Huber, François (1784). Observations sur le Vol des Oiseaux de Proie [Observations on the flight of birds of prey] (in French). Geneva: Chez Paul Barde. OCLC 7750393. Archived from the original on 20 April 2009. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  9. ^ a b c The Encyclopaedia Britannica - Volume 13 - page 845 - 1910
  10. ^ a b c d e f Koutchoumoff, Lisbeth (16 November 2018). "L'étonnante Histoire du Genevois François Huber, apiculteur aveugle et visionnaire". Le Temps.
  11. ^ a b Bonnet, Charles; Huber, François (1792). Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles [New observations on bees] (in French). Genève: Barde et Manget. OCLC 5585683. OL 23663011M. Archived from the original on 19 August 2009. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  12. ^ a b Huber, François (1806). New observations on the natural history of bees. Edinburgh: John Anderson. OCLC 1162801352. Archived from the original on 28 December 2009. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  13. ^ On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection by Charles Darwin - 1859 - page 230
  14. ^ On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection by Charles Darwin - 1859 - https://books.google.com/books?id=cAtfAAAAcAAJ&pg=PP5
  15. ^ Œuvres complètes de J. Delille by Jacques Delille - Notes du Chant VIII - page 267 - https://books.google.com/books?id=ZM4OAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA267
  16. ^ Œuvres complètes de J. Delille - Les Trois Regnes - page 246 - https://books.google.com/books?id=E5GaKxROEggC&pg=PA246
  17. ^ a b Journal de Physique, de Chimie et d'Histoire Naturelle T. 58. - https://opac.museogalileo.it/imss/resource?uri=1003209&found=1
  18. ^ Témoignage d'Huber sur elle : Nouvelles observations, t. 2, 1814, p. 431 [archive]
  19. ^ Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles, adressées à M. Charles Bonnet - 1792 Edition - https://books.google.com/books?id=WnlYAAAAcAAJ
  20. ^ Huber, François (1796). "Nouvelles observations sur les abeilles: Adressées à M. Charles Bonnet".
  21. ^ New Observations on the Natural History of Bees by Francis Huber - 1806 Edition - https://books.google.com/books?id=jXdlAAAAMAAJ
  22. ^ Mémoires sur l'influence de l'air et de diverses substances gazeuses dans la germination de différentes graines by François Huber and Jean Senebier - https://books.google.com/books?id=VTYU72nCkxcC
  23. ^ Bibliotheque Britannique - Volume 25 - page 58 - https://books.google.com/books?id=UsIaAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA59
  24. ^ a b Dictionnaire biographique des Genevois et des Vaudois - Lausanne 1877- Volume I - page 424 - https://books.google.com/books?id=ED0vAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA423
  25. ^ Bibliothèque Britannique Volume 27 - page 27 - https://books.google.com/books?id=iwPAmmvpkyMC&pg=PA275
  26. ^ Bibliothèque Britannique - Volume 27 - page 358 - https://books.google.com/books?id=U4A1AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358
  27. ^ Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles Volume I - 1814 - https://books.google.com/books?id=AARCAAAAcAAJ&pg=PP9
  28. ^ Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles Volume II - 1814 - https://books.google.com/books?id=rbJDAAAAcAAJ&pg=PP7
  29. ^ Lettres inédites de François Huber pour faire suite aux Nouvelles Observations (sur les Abeilles) by Edouard Bertrand - https://books.google.com/books?id=lnhlAAAAMAAJ
  30. ^ "François Huber ne voyait rien mais observait tout". Le Temps. 19 May 2014.
  31. ^ "Huberia DC. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
  32. ^ Huberia laurina DC. - Arizona State University Vascular Plant Herbarium - http://swbiodiversity.org/seinet/collections/individual/index.php?occid=1903739
  33. ^ Fragments d'Hubert sur les abeilles - https://books.google.com/books?id=NqVAAQAAMAAJ&pg=PR3
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Huber, François". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 845.

External links

  • Works by François Huber at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about François Huber at Internet Archive
  • The full text of Volume I of 'New Observations on the Natural History of Bees' by François Huber 1806 English edition
  • Complete scan of Volume I of 'New Observations on the Natural History of Bees' by François Huber 1806 English edition
  • Sketch of the Life of Francis Huber

françois, huber, july, 1750, december, 1831, also, known, francis, english, publications, franz, german, publications, swiss, entomologist, specialized, honey, bees, pioneering, work, recognized, across, europe, based, thorough, observation, with, help, severa. Francois Huber 2 July 1750 22 December 1831 also known as Francis in English publications and Franz in German publications 2 3 4 was a Swiss entomologist who specialized in honey bees His pioneering work was recognized all across Europe and based on thorough observation with the help of several assistants due to his blindness Francois HuberBorn2 July 1750Geneva Republic of GenevaDied22 December 1831 1831 12 23 aged 81 Lausanne SwitzerlandNationalityGenevan then Swiss 1815 Known forPioneer in the scientific knowledge of the life of the honey bee and its biologyNotable workNouvelles Observations sur les AbeillesSpouseMarie Aimee LullinChildrenPierre HuberMarie Anne HuberJean Huber 1 ParentJean Huber father Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life 1 2 Marriage 1 3 Early research 1 4 First publication 1 5 Further research 1 6 Last years 2 Publications 3 Legacy 4 References 5 External linksLife EditEarly life Edit Francois Huber was born in Geneva on 2 July 1750 in a well respected and well off family of merchants and bankers with important ties to Geneva Lyon and Paris 5 The Huber family had members in the highest institutions in the local community and was linked to other prominent local families 6 The family made significant contributions to the scientific and theological literature His great aunt Marie Huber was known as a voluminous writer on religious and theological subjects and as the translator and epitomizer of The Spectator Amsterdam 3 vols 1753 His father Jean Huber 1721 1786 was a prominent member of the coterie at Ferney 7 He was a well known artist who left several portraits of Voltaire who was a close friend 5 6 He was also interested in falcons and his observations led to him publishing on the subject 8 9 Portrait of young Francois Huber by his father Jean Huber From his early childhood Francois was instructed in the field of literature as well as natural history a passion he shared with his father He attended the College de Saussure but his health soon deteriorated His sight started failing at the age of fifteen His father requested the assistance of Theodore Tronchin to treat him He sent the young Huber to the village of Stains near Paris to recover There he lived the simple existence of a peasant away from the pressure of the high society The treatment was very successful for his health and he had fond recollection of the simple life there and of the hospitality throughout his life 5 However his eyesight was considered incurable by the oculist Venzel and he was facing total blindness He had however already met Marie Aimee Lullin the daughter of the syndics of the Swiss Republic They had both been companions during dances and had grown up together Her father refused to consent to their union because of his blindness as he did not want his fortune to end in the hands of a blind man when his daughter inherited However Marie refused to abandon Francois and decided to wait until she was twenty five when she would be legally able to make that decision on her own He could still see light and interacted with others as if he could see He later lost his sight completely but throughout his life he would say I have seen I have seen with my own eyes when recalling his youth and when others described things to him 5 Marriage Edit Marie resisted the pressures from her father to not marry this disabled man She had however to wait to attain her majority 25 years old at the time in order to marry Francois She walked down to the altar with Francois on 28 April 1776 6 with her maternal uncle M Rilliet Fatio and married Francois Huber She was 25 years and 23 days old At her side was a close friend and confidant Louise Eleonore Briere de Candolle Augustin Pyramus de Candolle s mother Marie later shared this story of her marriage to the young scientist and in later life she would honor him and recount his life after his passing 5 Marie became his reader his secretary and his observer and she was very attentive in order to prevent any embarrassments in public that could have occurred from his disability This strong loving relationship was noticed by many including Voltaire who mentioned it in his correspondence and it was inspiration for Germaine de Stael when she described the Belmont family in her novel Delphine 5 6 Early research Edit Francois Huber s Folio Hive He became interested in honey bees after being read the works of Rene de Reaumur and Charles Bonnet He also had a conversation with the latter who was also based in Geneva His curiosity was focused on the history of these insects His initial desire was to verify some facts and then fill in missing information Since he was now blind he had to rely on the help of others This included his wife but also his servant Francois Burnens who was fully devoted to his master Francois Burnens 1760 1837 was the son of peasants from Oulens sous Echallens from the Canton of Vaud who arrived in 1780 10 6 Huber taught him how to observe and directed him through questioning He leveraged his memories of his youth and the testimonials of his wife and friends 5 Through his observation he discovered that the queen bee did not mate in the hive but in the air and detailed how the timing of this event was essential He also confirmed the discovery by A M Schirach that bees are able to convert eggs into queens by the use of food royal jelly and that worker bees can also lay eggs He described the battles between queens the killing of drones at the end of the summer and what happens when a queen is replaced by a newly introduced queen He also proved that bees used their antennae to communicate He looked at the dimensions of the cells and how they influence the shape of the insects the way the larvae spins silk to make its cocoons He showed that queens are oviparitous He looked at the ways swarms formed and was the first to provide an accurate biological history of bee colonies 5 These observations were made using a new type of hive in which each comb had glass sides which Huber developed these hives were the ancestors of our modern observation hives Until then hives had been circular and made of straw These new hives opened as books with each frame visible to view 10 These allowed the team to observe the bees and follow them around These discoveries would not have been possible without the skills and bravery of Francois Burnens who was fully committed to discovering the truth It is said that he would face the attacks of an entire hive just to learn a fact 5 First publication Edit Drone Organs illustrated by Pierre Huber The results of these observations were the publication of French Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles New observations on bees in Geneva in 1792 11 The 800 page volume was made of the letters that Francois had sent to Charles Bonnet who happened to be his uncle It was translated into English in 1806 12 and into German 10 It was very well received by the scientific community not just because of the discoveries but also because he had overcome such a disability He was also welcomed by most of the academies of Europe especially the French Academy of Sciences It influenced other scientists including the renowned naturalist Charles Darwin who owned a copy and made a commentary of the book in his famous On the Origin of Species 13 He also mentions Pierre Huber 10 5 14 The poet Jacques Delille in his Chant VII Regne Animal celebrated Huber s blindness and discovery 15 16 Enfin de leur hymen savant depositaire L aveugle Huber l a vu par les regards d autruiEt sur ce grand probleme un nouveau jour a lui Further research Edit Drawing by Pierre Huber for his father s book He started studying wax and its production It had been speculated without sufficient proof that it came from the honey He had already explained the origin of propolis and was able to determine through observation with Burnens that wax came out from between the rings of the abdomen as laminated sheets These initial findings were published in Premier Memoire sur l origine de la Cire First memoir on the origin of wax in 1804 17 Burnens left in 1795 to go back to his village There he got married and became a farmer along with becoming a local judge 6 Marie Aimee assisted Huber but he also started training his son Pierre Huber He started his apprenticeship with his father as an observer He would go on to publish his own books not on bees but on ants With this new assistant by his side he was able to continue his research and in 1814 published a second edition edited in part by his son Further findings on wax were published in his second edition 5 9 Huber was also helped by Christine Jurine who dissected bees for him and discovered the ovaries of the working bees 18 He studied the damage caused by the Sphinx atropos in hives and looked into the question of smell and its importance in the hive He also studied the respiratory system of bees He was able to prove that bees consume oxygen like other animals This begged the question of how they survived with such a large population in enclosed hives with only a small entrance for fresh air He was able to prove for the first time that bees used their wings to circulate the air creating adequate ventilation In order to analyse the air he worked with Jean Senebier another Geneva scientist who was researching this question with regards to vegetables The two became friends and they published the Memoires sur l Influence de l Air et de Diverses Substances Gazeuses dans la Germination de Differentes Graines Memoirs on the Influence of Air and of Various Gaseous Substances on the Germination of Different Seeds in which they demonstrated the need for oxygen in germination 5 Last years Edit Francois Huber spent his last years in Lausanne being cared for by his daughter Marie Anne de Molin He continued some of his research and remained curious He was interested in the discovery of sting less bees near Tampico in Mexico by Captain Hall He was given some samples by Professor Prevost and later a full colony He was said to have kept his mental capacity to the end Those who were close to him said he was loving and beloved to the end On December 20 he wrote to a friend There is a time when it is impossible to remain neglectful it is when separating gradually from each other we may reveal to those we love all that esteem tenderness and gratitude have inspired us with towards them I say to you alone that resignation and serenity are blessings which have not been refused 5 He died two days later on 22 December 1831 in the arms of his daughter 5 9 Publications EditNouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles adresse a Charles Bonnet First Edition published in one volume in 1792 in Geneva 11 19 Reprinted in 1796 20 The English translation was published in London in 1806 12 21 Memoires sur l Influence de l Air et de Diverses Substances Gazeuses dans la Germination de Differentes Graines Geneva 1801 co published with Jean Senebier 22 Premier Memoire sur l origine de la Cire 1804 17 23 Memoire sur la construction des cellules 1804 in the Journal Nicholson and republished in 1814 24 Lettre de Mr Huber au Prof Pictet sur certains dangers que courent les Abeilles dans leurs ruches et sur les moyens de les en preserver Geneva October 29 1804 This is a letter that was published 25 Nouvelles Communications relatives au sphinx atropos et a l industrie des abeilles a s en defendre November 27 1804 This is a letter that was published as a follow up to the previous letter 24 26 Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles Second Edition published in two volumes in 1814 in Geneva and Paris This publication was edited by his son Pierre Huber 27 28 Lettres inedites de Francois Huber pour faire suite aux Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles published posthumously in 1897 in Nyon Switzerland by edited by Edouard Bertrand and published in La Revue Internationale d Apiculture These letters were sent by Huber to his young cousin Elisa de Portes who was interested in his work She kept the letters most of her life until giving them to Mr Bertrand to be published 29 30 Legacy EditAugustin de Candolle who was a close family friend and one of the first biographer gave Francois Huber s name to a genus of Brazilian trees Huberia 31 including Huberia laurina 5 It is a 3 metres 9 8 ft shrub with light green fruits that grows on rocky summits with soil filled crevices and small areas of white sand at an elevation of 1 100 metres 3 600 ft 32 A book was published in Paris in 1829 titled Fragments d Hubert sur les abeilles with an introduction by Dr Mayranx It is unclear if Francois Huber or Pierre Huber were involved in this publication but the last name is misspelled throughout 33 A novel by Sara George The Beekeeper s Pupil was published in 2002 inspired by the team of Huber and Burnens It is written as the fictional journal of Francois Burnens from his arrival at the Huber household at the age of 19 years old in 1784 to his departure 10 years later in 1794 Her novel is based on the writings of Huber but also those of Augustin de Candolle A French version was published in 2018 in Geneva by Slatkine 10 Francois Huber has been largely forgotten not only in the Geneva local history but also in the beekeeping community in spite of his discoveries having been unchallenged for over two centuries 10 References Edit Lullin family tree by Lionel Rossellat Marie Aimee Lullin Geneanet Retrieved 24 May 2019 Lieber Francis ed 1854 Encyclopaedia Americana Vol 6 B B Mussey amp Co p 458 Herrick S B 1875 Sketch of the Life of Francis Huber Popular Science Monthly via Wikisource Gordh Gordon 2011 A Dictionary of Entomology CABI p 708 ISBN 978 1 84593 542 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o De Candolle A P October 1832 The life and writings of Francis Huber Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal 14 283 296 via Google Books a b c d e f Saucy Francis 19 May 2014 Le Genevois qui mit au jour les secrets des abeilles Le Temps Chisholm 1911 Huber Francois 1784 Observations sur le Vol des Oiseaux de Proie Observations on the flight of birds of prey in French Geneva Chez Paul Barde OCLC 7750393 Archived from the original on 20 April 2009 Retrieved 23 October 2022 a b c The Encyclopaedia Britannica Volume 13 page 845 1910 a b c d e f Koutchoumoff Lisbeth 16 November 2018 L etonnante Histoire du Genevois Francois Huber apiculteur aveugle et visionnaire Le Temps a b Bonnet Charles Huber Francois 1792 Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles New observations on bees in French Geneve Barde et Manget OCLC 5585683 OL 23663011M Archived from the original on 19 August 2009 Retrieved 23 October 2022 a b Huber Francois 1806 New observations on the natural history of bees Edinburgh John Anderson OCLC 1162801352 Archived from the original on 28 December 2009 Retrieved 23 October 2022 On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection by Charles Darwin 1859 page 230 On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection by Charles Darwin 1859 https books google com books id cAtfAAAAcAAJ amp pg PP5 Œuvres completes de J Delille by Jacques Delille Notes du Chant VIII page 267 https books google com books id ZM4OAAAAIAAJ amp pg PA267 Œuvres completes de J Delille Les Trois Regnes page 246 https books google com books id E5GaKxROEggC amp pg PA246 a b Journal de Physique de Chimie et d Histoire Naturelle T 58 https opac museogalileo it imss resource uri 1003209 amp found 1 Temoignage d Huber sur elle Nouvelles observations t 2 1814 p 431 archive Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles adressees a M Charles Bonnet 1792 Edition https books google com books id WnlYAAAAcAAJ Huber Francois 1796 Nouvelles observations sur les abeilles Adressees a M Charles Bonnet New Observations on the Natural History of Bees by Francis Huber 1806 Edition https books google com books id jXdlAAAAMAAJ Memoires sur l influence de l air et de diverses substances gazeuses dans la germination de differentes graines by Francois Huber and Jean Senebier https books google com books id VTYU72nCkxcC Bibliotheque Britannique Volume 25 page 58 https books google com books id UsIaAQAAMAAJ amp pg PA59 a b Dictionnaire biographique des Genevois et des Vaudois Lausanne 1877 Volume I page 424 https books google com books id ED0vAAAAYAAJ amp pg PA423 Bibliotheque Britannique Volume 27 page 27 https books google com books id iwPAmmvpkyMC amp pg PA275 Bibliotheque Britannique Volume 27 page 358 https books google com books id U4A1AQAAMAAJ amp pg PA358 Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles Volume I 1814 https books google com books id AARCAAAAcAAJ amp pg PP9 Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles Volume II 1814 https books google com books id rbJDAAAAcAAJ amp pg PP7 Lettres inedites de Francois Huber pour faire suite aux Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles by Edouard Bertrand https books google com books id lnhlAAAAMAAJ Francois Huber ne voyait rien mais observait tout Le Temps 19 May 2014 Huberia DC Plants of the World Online Kew Science Plants of the World Online Retrieved 2 October 2021 Huberia laurina DC Arizona State University Vascular Plant Herbarium http swbiodiversity org seinet collections individual index php occid 1903739 Fragments d Hubert sur les abeilles https books google com books id NqVAAQAAMAAJ amp pg PR3 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Huber Francois Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 845 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Francois Huber Works by Francois Huber at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Francois Huber at Internet Archive The full text of Volume I of New Observations on the Natural History of Bees by Francois Huber 1806 English edition Complete scan of Volume I of New Observations on the Natural History of Bees by Francois Huber 1806 English edition Sketch of the Life of Francis Huber Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francois Huber amp oldid 1132408587, wikipedia, wiki, 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