Pierre Marie Auguste Broussonet
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Pierre Marie Auguste Broussonet (February 28, 1761 - January 17, 1807), French naturalist, was born at Montpellier, and was educated for the medical profession. Visiting England, he was admitted in 1780 an honorary member of the Royal Society, and in 1782 published at London the first part of his work on fishes, Ichthyologiae Decas I, material for which was communicated to him by Sir Joseph Banks.
On his return to Paris he was appointed perpetual secretary to the Society of Agriculture, and in 1789 became a member of the National Assembly. Under the convention he had to leave Paris, and after some dangers he made his way to Madrid. The enmity of the French emigrants, however, drove him from Spain, and afterwards from Lisbon, but at last he found a refuge in Morocco as physician to an embassy sent out by the United States. Later he obtained permission from the Directory to return to France, and in 1805 was appointed professor of botany at Montpellier, where he died.
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- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.