(Redirected from Melchisedech Thevenot)'Melchisédech' (or 'Melchisédec') 'Thévenot' (c.
1620 -
October 29,
1692) was a
French author, scientist, traveler, cartographer, orientalist, inventor, and diplomat. He was the inventor of the
spirit level and is also famous for his popular
1696 book ''The Art of Swimming'', one of the first books on the subject and widely read during the eighteenth century (
Benjamin Franklin, an avid swimmer in his youth, is known to have read it). The book popularized the
breaststroke (see
History of swimming). He also influenced the founding of the
Académie Royale des Sciences (the French Academy of Sciences). He died at
Issy.
Thévenot was an amateur scientist and patron of many scientists and mathematicians, maintaining correspondence with figures like
Jan Swammerdam, whom he encouraged to tackle the origin of
organisms. He was wealthy and well-connected, in
1684 becoming the Royal Librarian to King
Louis XIV of France. He also served as ambassador to
Genoa in
1647 and then to
Rome in the 1650s. After the death of Pope
Innocent X, he participated in the subsequent
conclave.
Thévenot came from a family of royal office holders (nobles of the robe), which partly explains his wealth. He was reputed to speak
English,
Greek,
Latin,
Hebrew, and several oriental languages, including
Arabic and
Turkish. The Newton scholar R. S. Westfall opined in his unpublished notes that Thévenot may have been of
Jewish origin, "due to the mystery of his origins, his knowledge of Hebrew, and his first name", the French rendering of
Melchizedek.
[1] This speculation is disproved by the fact that Thévenot's baptismal name was Nicolas, Melchisédech being added as the second (confirmation) name, almost certainly in honour of his maternal grandfather, Melchisédech Garnier (d. 1637), an "avocat" at the
Parlement of Paris, and probably a
Huguenot (given the
Old Testament name).
Scientific Studies
Thévenot studied
astronomy,
physics,
medicine, and
magnetism, and demonstrated in the 1660s the possibility that atmospheric pulsations had something to do with human and animal respiration. Between
1658 and
1661 Thévenot conducted experiments on
capillarity and the
siphon. He proposed the use of
lemon juice as a cure for various maladies, as well as
ipecac as a remedy for
dysentery.
Thévenot invented the spirit level (or bubble level) some time before
February 2,
1661, which he filled with alcohol and mounted on a stone ruler fitted with a viewing lens. This date can be very accurately established from Thevenot's correspondence with scientist
Christian Huygens. Within a year of this date the inventor circulated details of his invention to others, including
Robert Hooke in
London and
Vincenzo Viviani in
Florence. It is occasionally argued that these bubble levels did not come into widespread use until the beginning of the eighteenth century, the earliest surviving examples being from that time, but
Adrien Auzout had recommended that the
Académie Royale des Sciences take "levels of the Thévenot type" on its expedition to
Madagascar in 1666. It is very likely that these levels were in use in France and elsewhere long before the turn of the century.
Other works
Many of Thévenot's maps of the
Middle East were published in his ''Relations de Divers Voyages Curieux'' (
Paris,
1663), a collection of translations of voyages of discovery (such as that of
Cosmas Indicopleustes). One of these was one of the earliest and most detailed depiction of southern
Iraq (his nephew
Jean de Thévenot later visited this region). Thévenot makes reference to the
Mandaeans of the
Basra region, and includes a printed page from one of this sect’s holy books, one of the first printed appearances of the Mandaean language in Europe.
[2]
Thevenot is often confused with his nephew, the traveler
Jean de Thévenot. There is evidence to suggest that both Huygens and Hooke later laid claim to the invention of the spirit level, although only within their own countries. There is no surviving portrait of Thévenot, and an alleged portrait of him (such as can be seen in Gerrit Lindeboom’s edition of Thévenot’s letters to Swammerdam) is actually of his nephew Jean.
Sources
★
Robert A. Hatch, The Scientific Revolution, Westfall Catalogue, Scientific Community ''(contains bibliography of sources on Thévenot)''
★ Nicholas Dew. Reading travels in the culture of curiosity: Thévenot's collection of voyages. ''Journal of Early Modern History'' 10, no. 1-2 (2006): 39-59.
[3]
★ Camus, Armand-Gaston. ''Mémoire sur la Collection des grands et petits voyages'' [des de Bry] ''et sur la collection des voyages de Melchisedech Thévenot''. (Paris: Baudouin, 1802).
★ McClaughlin, Trevor. Sur les rapports entre la Compagnie de Thévenot et l'Académie royale des Sciences. ''Revue d'histoire des sciences'' 28 (1975): 235-242.
★ Turner, Anthony J. Melchisédech Thévenot, the bubble level, and the artificial horizon. ''Nuncius: annali di storia della scienza'' 7, no. 1 (1992): 131-145.