Jean Crespon

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Jean Crespon (14 October 1797,

naturalist
.

Born into a poor family, he worked as a barber, soldier, and poet before becoming a

taxidermist and turning to natural history. In 1840 he published his Ornithologie du Gard et des pays circonvoisins (Ornithology of Gard and Environs), a book that covered 321 species of birds. The book earned the praise of naturalists that included Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire
(1805-1861).

In 1844 Crespon published the two-volume La Faune méridionale (Mediterranean Wildlife), in which he described 27 new species.

Crespon's natural history collections passed to the Muséum d'histoire naturelle in Nîmes on his death.

Works about Jean Crespon

  • "Nos ornithologistes. Jean Crespon, 1797-1857," by Albert Hugues (Garnier-Chaboussant, 1922).[1]

References

  • This article is based on the article in French Wikipedia:
    • Maurice Boubier, L’Évolution de l’ornithologie, Paris, Alcan, coll. « Nouvelle collection scientifique », 1925, ii + 308 p.
    • René Ronsil, Bibliographie ornithologique française, t. 1 : Bibliographie, Paris, Lechevalier, 1948 (n° 690).
  1. ^ Jean Crespon, 1797-1857 Nos ornithologistes