The Dupont family: collectors, dealers and naturalists in nineteenth-century Paris

Author: Mearns Richard   Chevrier Laurent   Gouraud Christophe  

Publisher: Edinburgh University Press

E-ISSN: 1755-6260|43|2|191-207

ISSN: 1755-6260

Source: Archives of Natural History, Vol.43, Iss.2, 2016-10, pp. : 191-207

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Abstract

In the early part of the nineteenth century the Dupont brothers ran separate natural history businesses in Paris. Relatively little is known about their early life but an investigation into the family history at Bayeux corrects Lonard Dupont's year of birth from 1795 to 1796. In 1818 Lonard joined Joseph Ritchie's expedition to North Africa to assist in collecting and preparing the discoveries but he did not get beyond Tripoli. After 15 months he came back to Paris with a small collection from Libya and Provence, and returned to Provence in 1821. While operating as a dealer-naturalist in Paris he published Trait de taxidermie (1823, 1827), developed a special interest in foreign birds and became well known for his anatomical models in coloured wax. Henry Dupont sold a range of natural history material and with his particular passion for beetles formed one of the finest collections in Europe; his best known publication is Monographie des Trachydrides (18361840). Because the brothers had overlapping interests and were rarely referred to by their forenames there has been confusion between them and the various eponyms that commemorate them. Although probably true, it would be an over-simplification to state that birds of this era named for Dupont refer to Lonard Dupont, insects to Henry Dupont, and molluscs to their mother.