Jacques Montet


Jacques Montet was an 18th-century French pharmacist, chemist and encyclopediste.

Biography

Jacques Montet was born in Beaulieu, near Vigan from Gabriel Montet and Madeleine Gaubert.
Thanks to an Englishman, whom he accompanied on his trips to Switzerland, his interest in the natural sciences was awakened, in particular for chemistry. So much so that his first visit to Paris led him to attend the lectures of Guillaume-François Rouelle.
Montet went then to Montpellier in order to follow a pharmacist training. In 1748, he became a member of the . Later he became a demonstrator under Gabriel François Venel, whose lecture in chemistry he also benefited from.
Montet continued his research on various topics and also dealt with general natural history. His work on physics, natural history and agriculture in a part of the Cevennes were published in the Memoirs of the Academy of Sciences of Montpellier. He eventually wrote three articles for the volumes XV and XVI of the Encyclopédie von Denis Diderot und Jean le [Rond d'Alembert], Tartre, Tournesol and Vert-de-gris, ou Verdet
In February 1769, he married Gillette Carchet from Montpellier, but the couple remained childless.

Works

  • L'Art de faire le vert-de-gris, Mémoires de l'Académie des sciences de Paris, 1750-1753-1756 ;
  • Sur le sel lixiviel de tamaris, Mémoires de l'Académie des sciences, 1757 ;
  • Sur un grand nombre de volcans éteints qu'on a trouvés dans le bas Languedoc, Mémoires de l'Académie des sciences de Paris, 1760 ;
  • Description des Marais de Peccais|salins de Peccais, Mémoires de l'Académie des sciences de Paris, 1763 ;
  • Sur la manière de conserver en tout temps les cristaux de l'alcali fixe, 1765 ;
  • Sur la morsure de la vipère, 1773, etc.