Generated by GPT-5-mini| Jacques Julien Houtou de La Billardière | |
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| Name | Jacques Julien Houtou de La Billardière |
| Birth date | 23 October 1755 |
| Birth place | Alençon, Kingdom of France |
| Death date | 6 September 1834 |
| Death place | Paris, Kingdom of France |
| Nationality | French |
| Fields | Botany, Exploration |
| Known for | Botanical collections from Australia, publication Voyage de découvertes |
Jacques Julien Houtou de La Billardière was a French botanist and naturalist noted for his botanical collections from the southern hemisphere, especially Terra Australis and the Tasmania region, during the Age of Discovery and the era of French Revolutionary Wars. His work bridged expeditions associated with Jean-François de Galaup, comte de Lapérouse, the Baudin voyage, and contemporaries such as Joseph Banks and James Cook, influencing later figures like Charles Darwin and Georges Cuvier.
Born in Alençon in 1755, he trained in medicine at the University of Caen and the University of Paris, where he studied under physicians and naturalists linked to institutions such as the Jardin du Roi and the Académie des Sciences. La Billardière's formative contacts included botanists associated with Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu, collectors tied to Pierre André Latreille, and physicians connected to the court circles of Louis XVI. Early exposure to collections at the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle and networks around Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire informed his methodology in specimen preservation and taxonomy.
He built a career combining medical practice with systematic botany, corresponding extensively with leading naturalists of the late 18th and early 19th centuries such as Christiaan Hendrik Persoon, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, Erasmus Darwin, and William Aiton. La Billardière's herbarium practices reflected principles advanced at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and the British Museum (Natural History), and his descriptive work engaged with taxonomic frameworks used by Carl Linnaeus and modified by Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu. He described numerous genera and species from New Holland, applying binomial nomenclature while debating concepts later examined by Alexander von Humboldt and Aimé Bonpland.
La Billardière joined voyages associated with the French scientific and naval apparatus during the period of French Revolutionary Wars, embarking on an official voyage to the southern oceans that touched Chile, the Tierra del Fuego, New Zealand, and the coasts of New Holland. His travels overlapped in time with the expeditions of Nicolas Baudin, and he interacted with crews and officers from ships like the Recherche and Naturaliste. During landings in Van Diemen's Land, he collected plant specimens later compared against collections from voyages by James Cook and observations by William Dampier. Encounters with indigenous peoples on islands in the Pacific Ocean, coastal settlements such as Sydney and Cape Town, and ports like Valparaíso informed his geographic and ethnographic notes, which paralleled reportage by Antoine Bruni d'Entrecasteaux and Louis de Freycinet.
His major work, Voyage de découvertes (three-volume botanical atlas and narrative), presented plates and descriptions influenced by illustrators and engravers who had worked for the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle and publishers in Paris. The volumes included botanical plates comparable to those in works by Johann Reinhold Forster and Francis Masson, and specimens later entered collections at institutions such as the Natural History Museum, London and the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle. La Billardière's correspondence and specimen lists were cited by taxonomists including John Lindley, Robert Brown, and Augustin Pyramus de Candolle, and his plates were used by illustrators associated with the Encyclopédie méthodique and botanical atlases of the period.
He described numerous taxa now recognized in families such as Proteaceae, Myrtaceae, and Fabaceae, and several genera and species were named in his honor by contemporaries and later botanists, reflecting practices also seen in the works of George Bentham and Joseph Dalton Hooker. His specimens served as types for later revisions by Alphonse Pyramus de Candolle, Ferdinand von Mueller, and Ernst Haeckel-era naturalists. La Billardière's legacy persists in botanical nomenclature, herbarium holdings, and the historiography of French exploration alongside the narratives of Lapérouse and Baudin, impacting botanical biogeography studies by Alexander von Humboldt and phylogenetic syntheses used by modern researchers at institutions such as Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and the Australian National Herbarium.
After returning to Europe amid geopolitical turmoil involving the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars, he settled in Paris where he continued writing, curating collections, and corresponding with European naturalists including Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire and Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu. He faced legal and financial challenges connected to the fate of his collections during the wars, similar to issues encountered by collectors like Jean-Baptiste Leschenault de La Tour. La Billardière died in 1834 in Paris, leaving a substantive herbarium and published corpus that influenced 19th-century botany and continues to be referenced in modern floristic and taxonomic research.
Category:French botanists Category:1755 births Category:1834 deaths