Jacques Daléchamps
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Jacques Daléchamps (1513, Caen – 1588) was a French botanist and physician. When the scholar Isaac Casaubon first established the Greek text of the recently rediscovered Deipnosophistae, it was printed alongside a Latin translation by Daléchamps.
He was the pupil of Guillaume Rondelet and became physician of the Hôtel-Dieu de Lyon.[1]
In 1452, he published Raymond Chalin de Vinario's “treatise on the plague”.[2]
Works[]
- Histoire generale des plantes Bd.1-2 . Lyon 1615 Digital edition by the University and State Library Düsseldorf
Further reading[]
Schmitt, Charles B. (1970–1980). "Daléchamps, Jacques (or Jacobus Dale Champius)". Dictionary of Scientific Biography. 3. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 533–534. ISBN 978-0-684-10114-9.
References[]
- ^ Bonnichon, Philippe; Fontaine, Marine; Vons, Jacqueline (2018). "La Chirurgie françoise de Jacques Dalechamps, commentateur de Paul d'Égine" (PDF). Histoire des sciences médicales (in French). 52 (1): 91.
- ^ Chalin de Vinario, Raimond; Daléchamps, Jacques (1552). De Peste libri tres opera Jacobi Dalechampii (in Latin). Lyon: Gulielmum Rouillium.
- ^ IPNI. Daléchamps.
Categories:
- 1513 births
- 1588 deaths
- People from Caen
- French botanists
- 16th-century botanists
- 16th-century French physicians
- French scientist stubs