Étienne Mignot de Montigny

Étienne Mignot de Montigny (15 December 1714, in Paris – 6 May 1782) was a French engineer and geographer.

He studied the textile industries in England, Switzerland, and France in the 1730s. He was then appointed a commissioner in the Ministry of Commerce. He was responsible for making improvements to industry and commerce through the application of new inventions and machinery. From 1758 to 1782 he was a member of the Académie Royale des Sciences. He was also an associate of the Prussian Academy of Sciences.[1]

With César-François Cassini de Thury and Charles Étienne Louis Camus, he published the Carte de la France.[1][2]

Associated works

  • Instruction et avis aux habitans des provinces méridionales de la France, sur la maladie putride et pestilentielle qui détruit le bétail, 1775 Training and advice to the inhabitants of the southern provinces of France concerning the putrid and pestilential disease that destroys livestock.
  • Méthode d’apprêter les cuirs et les peaux, telle qu’on la pratique à la Louisiane, 1780 Method of preparing hides and skins, as practiced in Louisiana.
  • Les voyageurs en Bretagne : voyage de Mignot de Montigny de l'Académie des Sciences en Bretagne, en 1752 (edition by Henri Bourde de La Rogerie, 1926) The voyagers of Brittany; voyage of Mignot de Montigny in Brittany in 1752.[2][1]

References

  1. Mignot de Montigny, Étienne Sociétés savantes de France
  2. Montigny, Etienne Mignot de (1714-1782) IdRef (bibliography)


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