Brisson was born on 30 April 1723 at
Fontenay-le-Comte in the
Vendée department of western France.[1] His parents wished him to take ecclesiastic orders but in 1747 he abandoned his studies,[2][3] and from 1749[3] was employed by the wealthy French naturalist
René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur as the curator of a large private collection of objects related to natural history that de Réaumur kept at his ancestral home at
Réaumur in the Vendée.[4]
Brisson became interested in the classification of animals and was influenced by the works of
Carl Linnaeus and
Jacob Theodor Klein.[4] His book Le Règne animal was published in 1756,[5] and the highly regarded six-volume work Ornithologie was published in 1760.[6]
The English ornithologist
Alfred Newton wrote of Brisson's Ornithologie that it was "a work of very great merit so far as it goes, for as a descriptive ornithologist the author stands even now unsurpassed;...".[7] For each species Brisson clearly indicated whether he had examined a specimen or whether he was relying on descriptions by other authors.[7] Although in Brisson coined a Latin name for each bird species, these do not conform to the
binomial system and are not recognised by the
International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN).[8] However, Brisson also introduced names for
genera and these are accepted by the ICZN.[9][10][11] Linnaeus relied heavily on Brisson's work when updating his Systema Naturae for the
twelfth edition in 1766. Linnaeus added 386 bird species of which 240 were based exclusively on Brisson.[8]
De Réaumur died in 1757 and although in his will he left his large collection to the
French Academy of Sciences, it was instead absorbed into the "Cabinet du roi", the royal natural history collection in Paris.[12] Brisson abandoned zoology and in 1762 succeeded
Jean-Antoine Nollet as professor of physics at the
College of Navarre in Paris.[4]
For a period of time Brisson was an instructor of physical sciences and natural history to the family of the monarch.[1] From 1759 he was a member of the
Academy of Sciences.[13]
A significant work involving the "
specific weight of bodies" was his Pesanteur Spécifique des Corps published in 1787.[14] In his investigations of
electricity, Brisson was opposed to the theories of
Priestley and
Franklin.[15]
He married Marie-Denise Foliot de Foucherolles on 24 April 1775. They had three children.[13]
He died on 23 June 1806 at
Magny-les-Hameaux near Versailles
—— (1789). Traité élémentaire, ou principes de physique. Fondés sur les connoissances les plus certaines, tant anciennes que modernes, & confirmés par l'expérience (3 Volumes) (in French). Paris: Moutard.
Volume 1,
Volume 2,
Volume 3.
Trattato elementare ovvero Principi di fisica. Grazioli, Florenz 1791.
Die spezifischen Gewichte der Körper. Leipzig 1795.
Suplemento al Diccionario universal de física. Cano, Madrid 1796–1802.
^
abMerland, Constant (1883).
"Mathurin-Jacques Brisson". Biographies vendéennes (in French). Vol. 2. Nantes, France: Vincent Forest & Émile Grimaud. pp. 1–47.
^
abcStresemann, Erwin (1975). Cottrell, G. William (ed.). Ornithology From Aristotle to the Present. Translated by Epstein, Hans J.; Epstein, Cathleen. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 53–54.
ISBN978-0-674-64485-4. Originally published by F. W. Peters in 1951 as Die Entwicklung Der Ornithologie von Aristoteles bis zur Gegenwart.
^
abAllen, J.A. (1910). "Collation of Brisson's genera of birds with those of Linnaeus". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 28: 317–335.
hdl:
2246/678.
Gallica has a free digital download of Brisson, Mathurin-Jacques Ornithologia sive Synopsis methodica sistens avium divisionem in ordines, sectiones, genera, species, ipsarumque varietates Leiden (1760–1763) in Microforme The French word for Search is Recherche.