BOOKS ON ARCHITECTURE
Author(s) |
Bernard, Jean |
Title |
Sauvegarde pour ceux qui craignent la fumée... |
Imprint |
Dijon, C. Guyot, 1621 |
Localisation |
Besançon, Bibliothèque municipale, 247604 |
Subject |
Chimneys |
French
Jean Bernard's
book contains most of what we know about him. The "Extrait des
Registres du Parlement", dated April 30, 1621, specifies that he
is "Prestre, Chappelain en la Saincte Chappelle du Roy à
Dijon". He presents himself as a man who, in order to assure his
function as steward "en l’administration & gouvernement
de [la] cellerie, à la recepte des vins", has acquired knowledge
of "arpenterie" and the maintenance and repair of buildings,
thanks to the study of books on geometry and architecture. One learns
that he delights in reading the "bons Autheurs d'Architecture"
and that he is preparing "principes d'Architecture", or "conseil
à ceux qui veullent bastir". But the Sauvegarde pour
ceux qui craignent la fumée, published by the Dijon printer
Claude Guyot, seems to be his only book.
If Jean
Bernard was the first to publish in France a book specifically dedicated
to smoky fireplaces, he was in fact dealing with a question interesting
many during his period which, as he emphasizes himself, preoccupied
several great architects. He quotes Philibert de l'Orme and his tin
air-holes, "Serlio & les Italiens" who top off their chimney
stacks with "chapiteaux comme des lanternes" and the new Dijon-style
chimney stacks "à la Capussine" pierced with holes
like a dovecote. However this small octavo book is not a "spécialisé"
book of architecture, comparable to the many appearing at the beginning
of the 18th century (Nicolas Gauger La Mécanique du feu,
1713). Rather it is related to the books "d'inventions" and
as such perhaps close to the translation of the essay of François
Kaeslar (Keslar), published two years earlier in Oppenheim by Jean-Théodore
de Bry (Epargne bois, c’est à dire, Nouvelle et par
ci-devant non commune, ni mise en lumiere, invention de certains et
divers fourneaux artificiels… maintenant publiée en François,
1619).
In his headword,
Jean Bernard states that he wants to "imiter les Medecins"
by first dealing with the properties of fire and of smoke, then with
the "remède" to bring "guerison aux malades".
His "secret" lies "en trois mots": construct chimney
flues in the shape of funnels, wider at the top than at the bottom.
But the book is not devoted only to smoke. Like many inventors, the
author suggests several improvements derived from his rule: a wine extractor
to protect oneself from "valets et chambrières" who
were lovers of fine wines, a new funnel to facilitate "l'entonnage"
of liqueurs and oils, and downspouts, obviously wider at the bottom
than at the top. He devotes many pages to showing the scientific foundations
of his inventions. One learns that human organs- from the nostrils to
the sexual organs- function according the principle of his new fireplaces,
that nothing is really ever plumb or level, that nature abhors a vacuum,
or even what happens to a bullet fired from a musket pointed straight
up.
Jean Bernard
describes his difficulties to persuade the learned and the ignorant
of the "experiences & demonstrations oculaires […] palpables"
necessary to convince the former and the negociations to convince the
latter, masons, to construct glazed walls, according to the rules, therefore,
contrary to the principle of the plumb line imposed by the "loix,
statuts & ordonnances" of the "privilèges de maistrise".
With the abolition of the "maîtrises" in 1619 and 1620
he was incited to publish his procedure perfected in 1616.
The book,
composed of 96 leaves of text without illustrations, is not always clear
in its descriptions, which could explain its limited circulation. The
Dictionnaire de bibliographie by Etienne Psaume (1824) designates
it as rare. If Jean Bernard is quoted in several dictionaries and encyclopedias
of industrial engineering, it seems that few authors have really read
his text. Only Louis Savot (L’Architecture Françoise
des bastimens particuliers, 1624) and Pierre Hébrard (Caminologie
ou traité des cheminées, 1756) give a faithful account
of his invention. Most restrict themselves to copying a list made by
Savot of all the methods invented since Vitruvius to prevent fireplaces
from smoking. Bernard appears in this list with his "molinets de
fer blanc", an invention whose disadvantages he does not deny.
The "complément" to his book, published in 1646 by
Jean Valon, canon of the Saint-Chapelle (Adjonction aux livres intitulés
Sauve-Garde du Feu et de la Fumée, contenant un expédient
pour empêcher que la fumée ne soit renvoyée par
le vent, la pluye, la neige et la chaleur du soleil, Palliot, 1646),
even rarer, did not manage to earn him celebrity.
Valérie Nègre (École d'architecture
de Paris La Villette, Paris) – 2009
Critical bibliography
M. H. Clément-Janin, Les imprimeurs et les libraires dans
la Côte d’Or, Geneva, Slatkine reprints, 1971, pp.
20-24 (1st ed.: Dijon, 1883).
|