1322199 MANUSCRIPT | SIGNED BY LÉMERY, BOULDUC, AND GEOFFROY. Louis Lémery, Gilles-François Boulduc, Claude Joseph Geoffroy.
MANUSCRIPT | SIGNED BY LÉMERY, BOULDUC, AND GEOFFROY

MANUSCRIPT | SIGNED BY LÉMERY, BOULDUC, AND GEOFFROY

[Paris?]: 1732. Signed Manuscript (7.5" x 8.5"), 1 page. Dated February 27, 1732. Document has creases along edges, and small section of paper loss under Lemery's signature. Signed by Louis Lémery, Gilles-François Boulduc, Claude Joseph Geoffroy. French language.

In this report, possibly in Lemery's hand and presumably prepared for the French Academy of Science, Lémery, Boulduc, and Geoffroy write the following concerning the trade of rhubarb (translation): "We have examined by order of the Academy a dissertation submitted the Controller General concerning the trade of rhubarb and false rhubarb which was substituted for the [latter or former?] because it is rare in France; we opine that in order to [illegible] the trade of rhubarb which is as delicious from Archangel to the Echelles du Levant [ports in the Near East and North Africa], it would be in the interest of the king and the public good that the [illegible] forbid the entry of false rhubarb from foreign lands. If false rhubarb is useful in certain cases, enough of it grows in the kingdom to satisfy that need."

Consignment. Shelved in Case 0.

1322199

Shelved Dupont Bookstore

Price: $2,000

NOTES

Louis Lémery (1677-1743) was a French botanist and chemist. The son of scientist Nicolas Lemery (1645-1715), he was appointed physician at the Hôtel-Dieu de Paris in 1710, and became demonstrator of chemistry at the Jardin du Roi in 1731. Lemery was the author of several works relating to medicine, chemistry, and various foods.

Gilles-François Boulduc (1675-1741) was a French chemist.

Claude Joseph Geoffroy (1685-1752) was the brother of Étienne François Geoffroy (1672-1731). Like his brother, he was an apothecary and chemist. Having a considerable knowledge of botany, he devoted himself especially to the study of the essential oils in plants.