Louis-Bernard Guyton de Morveau

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Louis-Bernard Guyton de Morveau.
Louis-Bernard Guyton de Morveau.
First flight with a dirigible balloon, 12 June 1784. Illustration from the late 19th Century.
First flight with a dirigible balloon, 12 June 1784. Illustration from the late 19th Century.

Louis-Bernard Guyton de Morveau (also Guyton-Morveau after the French Revolution; January 4, 1737January 2, 1816) was a French chemist and politician. He is credited with producing the first systematic method of chemical nomenclature.

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Guyton de Morveau was born in Dijon, where he served as a lawyer, then avocat général, of the Dijon parlement. In 1782 he resigned this post to dedicate himself to chemistry, collaborating on the Encyclopédie Méthodique and working for industrial applications. He performed various useful services in this role, and founded La Société des Mines et Verreries in Saint-Bérain-sur-Dheune.

During the Revolution, Guyton de Morveau (then styled Guyton-Morveau) served as Procureur général syndic of the Côte-d'Or département in 1790, was elected a deputy to the Legislative Assembly in 1792, and then to the National Convention.

Although a member of the right wing, he voted in favor of the execution of King Louis XVI. Guyton de Morveau served on the Committee of Public Safety from April 6, 1793 to July 10, 1793, when he resigned in order to devote his time to the manufacture of firearms, and formation of a corps of balloonists for the French Revolutionary Army. He himself flew in a balloon during the battle of Fleurus on June 26, 1794, and assisted in several other battles.

He was among the founders of the École Polytechnique and the École de Mars, and was a professor of mineralogy at the Polytechnique (as well as its director in 1797). He became a first-class member of the Académie des sciences in chemistry, on November 20, 1795, and subsequently elected vice-president of the class (1806) and then president (1807). Under the Directory, he served on the Council of Five Hundred from 1797, elected from Ille-et-Vilaine, and was Treasury administrator of the Consulate in 1799.

Guyton de Morveau was made a baron of the First French Empire in 1811. He died in Paris five years after.

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