Charles Boursin
Charles Boursin was a French entomologist.
Early life
Boursin was born into a comfortable bourgeois Catholic family in Nantes. Having had a German governess, he spoke German from his earliest days and remained "perfectly" bilingual in both during his lifetime. He also spoke Hungarian and Russian. Despite his formal humanist education he showed an early interest in the natural sciences.Career
On arriving in Paris from Nantes in 1920, he immediately made contact with Parisian entomological circles, and in 1922 was admitted as a member to the Societe Entomologique de France and helped in the creation of L'amateur de Papillons, and with his new colleagues and friends hunted Lepidoptera in Colmars-les_Alpes, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, Alpes-Maritimes and elsewhere. At this time, welcomed by Professor Louis Bouvier, he also began to work as a volunteer at the entomological laboratories of Muséum national d'histoire naturelle, where he worked to classify the Noctuidae and many other insect groups. By 1935 he was listed as working at the museum's entomological laboratory, and in 1943 he became a paid assistant there. His linguistic capabilities meant that he was the museum's delegate to international colloquia.One of his major contributions to the taxonomy of Lepidoptera was to use their genital armature in their classification. He began to publish entomological works in 1923 and in 1933 was awarded the Constant Prize of the Entomological Society of France for his work on the Lepidoptera subfamily, Trifinae, of the family Noctuidae. In 1938 he joined the editorial committee of the journal L'Amateur de Papillons, consisting of Philippe Henriot, Ferdinand Le Cerf, Simon Le Marchand, Henri Stempffer and Léon Lhomme. A close friendship with fellow member of the editorial committee, Phillipe Henriot, together with his close friendships with German entomologists led to his dismissal on 5 September 1944 from the chair of entomology at the museum, followed on 24 October 1944 by his expulsion from the Societe Entomologique de France, and he never again published in L'Amateur de Papillons. Following this, he found work in December 1945 as a translator with the French army of occupation in Austria, and in Vienna was again able to pursue his entomological work, being welcomed into the laboratory of Witburg Metzky. He returned to Paris in the early fifties, continuing to be shunned by the French entomological community, living for the rest of his life in a continual state of financial embarrassment. Nonetheless he continued to work on the Trifinae, and was invited by many institutions to work on their collections - Museum Alexander Koenig, Dortmund Naturhistorisches Museum, Naturmuseum Senckenberg, Zoologische Staatssammlung, Naturhistorisches Museum, and museums in Sweden and Switzerland. Just prior to his death, Alfred Balachowsky obtained a position for him at the museum, together with a grant from the CNRS.
He described many new species of Trifinae of which he was the world specialist, and in 1964 established a list of French Noctuid Trifinae. Prior to his death he had sold his library and his collection to the Museum of Karlsruhe. In 1967 the collection consisted of 29,245 specimens of Trifinae. At his death he had contributed some 200 scientific papers to the entomological literature.