Georges Louis Marie Dumont de Courset
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George Louis Marie Dumont de Courset (September 16, 1746–1824) was a French botanist and agronomist. Born near Boulogne, he studied in Paris and showed an aptitude for music and drawing.
He joined the military when he was 17 and became a second lieutenant. Sent to the south of France, he visited the Pyrenees and caught a passion for botany. He gave up his military career and returned home to build an extensive garden that became famous for the diversity of plant species. He tried to influence the agricultural techniques employed in his area. Protected by scientists like Andre Thouin (1746-1824) during the Revolution, he became corresponding member of the French Academy of Agriculture.
He publishesd five volumes on the Botaniste farmer, or description, culture and use of most of and indigenous, naturalized the foreign plants, naturalized and indigenous, cultivated in France and England, arranged according to the method of Jussieu in 1802. Later he entirely re-examined the work and re-issued it in six volumes (1811). In these volumes, Dumont de Courset described 8,700 species and indicated their characteristics and their cultivation.
[edit] References
- This article is based on a translation from the French Wikipedia
- Louis-Gabriel Michaud (1855). Biographie universelle ancienne et moderne. Mme C. Desplaces (Paris).