BOOKS ON ARCHITECTURE
Author(s) |
Bachot, Ambroise |
Title |
Le timon... |
Imprint |
Paris, A. Bachot, [1587] |
Localisation |
Paris, Ensba, Masson 159 |
Subject |
Geometry, Machines, Military architecture, Perspective |
French
Ambroise Bachot
was born in an environment of painters and book makers. His father,
Louis Bachot, a master-painter, lived on the rue de Seine, faubourg
Saint-Germain, at the beginning of the 1540s. His property adjoined
that of Jean Cousin Senior. It overlooked the rue des Marais (rue Visconti)
near the rue de Seine. Out of Louis’ three sons, Jean, master-bookbinder,
Laurent, master-painter, and Ambroise, at least the last two lived in
this residence during their whole lives. Bachot said he printed his
first book, the Timon, in 1587, at the address of the Croix
Blanche near the rue de Seine. And when he published the Gouvernail
in 1598 in Melun at the bookseller Bruneval’s shop, one can read
in it that he “s’en trouvera aussi en son logis rue de seine...”.
His widow was still living there in 1616.
We know very
little about Ambroise Bachot’s life. In 1571 he was with the engineer
Agostino Ramelli, in 1573 they were at the siege of La Rochelle, and
in 1577 at Turin. Everything leads us to believe that Bachot carried
out the functions of “conducteur des dessins” for sixteen
years with Ramelli, that he became “capitaine” then engineer
of the fortifications starting from that first training he probably
acquired in his family environment.
From 1579 to
1587 he engraved the plates of the Timon which he published
himself. Then he declared himself “le capitaine A. Bachot”.
He married Hélène Bernard and in 1588 they had a son,
Jérôme, who would have a fine career as engineer and superintendent
of the fortifications of Brittany, succeeding Charles Errard, his wife
Anne’s father.
During the siege
of Paris, in 1590, Ambroise Bachot took Henri IV’s side, followed
him to Melun and in 1593 settled in the parish of Saint-Ambroise. He
carried out the functions of engineer of the city fortifications; in
1597 he drew up the plans for a new fortification project which is presently
at the museum of Melun. He was still carrying out those functions in
1598. In 1600 he was in Paris. We know nothing more.
Thus Ambroise
Bachot’s two very rare works are available today on line. We have
knowledge of only three copies of the Timon: the one at the
Ensba, scanned here, and another one available at the Sainte-Geneviève
library (fol. V 341 inv 418 Res). There is little difference between
them. They consist of the same number of pages (60 leaves) and a few
rare inversions in the order of the engraved plates. However the copy
at the Sainte-Geneviève library contains in addition seven drawings
from the end of the 16th or the beginning of the 17th century and eleven
engravings taken from Artillerie, c’est à dire Vraye
instruction de l’artillerie et de toutes ses appartenances...
by Diego Ufano (Rouen, 1628). There is a third copy at the Bayerische
Staatsbibliothek in Munich. According to Martha Gnudi’s description
of it, it contains only 43 leaves and does not contain one whole part
devoted to perspective (two texts and twelve diagrams outlined in a
fillet border) nor four others devoted to distance measurement apparatus,
which are found in the copies in Paris.
The Timon
enjoyed a certain fame in recent historiography following the publication
of Martha Gnudi’s article in 1974. While she was working on the
translation and the publication of the most famous of the “theatres
of machines”, the Diverse et artificiose machine de Ramelli,
she became intrigued by the author’s denunciation of the theft
of his fortification drawings by any one of his “domestiques”
whom he leaves nameless, she looked for the guilty party and discovered
Ambroise Bachot. Bachot, far from concealing his debt to Ramelli mentions
it at length three times in the Timon, praising this “nouvel
Archimède”. In his preface Ramelli writes that “me
donnant titre de vertueux, en apparence de me louer, & se louans
eux-mesmes” these “domestiques” “ont desrobé
plusieurs desseins particuliers, & adjoustans à iceux, &
diminuant quelques inutiles parcelles, inventées de leurs folles
fantaisies ; & en les courbans, ou en autre endroict les destournant
pour couvrir leurs larrecins”.
Martha Gnudi’s
arguments are rather convincing and universally repeated. Since Ramelli’s
book is dated 1588 and the Timon 1587-89, it could only be
a question of the latter work. There remains the plural of the accused
“domestiques”. Now if in the Gouvernail one can
see some engravings signed by Laurent Bachot, it is not the case with
the Timon. Martha Gnudi’s
criticism of Bachot is very severe; it takes up again and supports Ramelli’s,
which makes her miss something essential: as the titles of his works
indicate, Bachot’s intention is not Ramelli’s. The Timon
“conduira le lecteur parmi les guerrieres mathematiques sur les
réduction des unes aux autres figures geometriques et instruments
de mesurer toutes distances et representer tout corps en perspective”
; just as le Gouvernail “conduira le curieux de Geometrie
en perspective dedans l’architecture des fortifications, machine
de guerre et plusieurs autres particularitez y contenues”. The
first raison d’être of these works concerns a whole system
of questions relative to the written representation of technical inventions.
He adds to the Timon, he says, “un traicte fort utille
des Fortifications Machines de guerre et aultres particularites inventes
par l’auteur” : the theft concerned only this second part
and in fact the style of the machine drawings is the same as in the
Diverse et artificiose machine, down to the details. The plates
are simply placed side by side, without explanation or explanatory texts
which were customary in the theatres of machines. On the other hand
the texts in the first part of the Timon reveal an original
approach, very different from Ramelli’s. Bachot’s reflections
on method, on the development of ideas, on the importance to grant to
perspective, but also on the usefulness of scale models to predict,
as well as his conception of the appropriate time, the opportunity,
are all felicitous remarks, part of a vigorous tradition during his
period.
Hélène Vérin (Centre national de
la recherche scientifique, Centre Koyré, Paris) – 2006
Critical bibliography
J. Guiffrey, Histoire générale de Paris, artistes
parisiens du XVIe et du XVIIe siècles, Paris, Imprimerie
nationale, 1915, p. 49.
G. Leroy, Melun sous Henri IV, Melun, Hérissé,
1866, p. 13.
G. Leroy, "Un ingénieur du roy au XVIe siècle", Almanach de Seine-et-Marne, Paris, 1873, pp. 116-119.
P. Renouard, Imprimeurs et libraires parisiens du XVIe siècle,
2, Paris, Service des travaux historiques de la Ville de Paris, 1969,
pp. 3-6.
M. Teach Gnudi, "The cover design. Agostino Ramelli and Ambroise
Bachot", Technology and culture, 15, 4, 1974,
pp. 614-625.
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