BOOKS ON ARCHITECTURE
The engineer Gautier (1660-1733) wrote Le Traitté des fortifications. He was also known as Gauthier de Nîmes, and his first name, Henri or Hubert, has never been documented with absolute certainty. He is alternately referred to as Henri (Paris, BnF) or Hubert (Encyclopaedia Britannica). “H. Gautier” as he signed his memoirs and his writings, was the son of a Huguenot carder originally from Nîmes. Trained as a doctor in medicine at the university in Orange in 1679, Gautier turned to the profession of military engineer before taking up that of civil engineer. His career can be divided into two periods. During the first, which runs from approximately 1684 to 1689, documents mention Gautier as military engineer in Languedoc and in Protestant strongholds in the South of France. Thus he worked in Orange in 1685, then at the fort of Nîmes from 1686 to 1689 before being appointed engineer of the province of Languedoc in 1693. That same year, probably held back by the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes (1685) which hampered the progress of his career, he converted to Catholicism in Nîmes on June 26, 1689. From then on, until his death in 1733, Gautier focused on a career as civil engineer, becoming in 1713 one of the first inspectors of the Corps des Ponts et Chaussées. Although he is today mainly known for his civil engineering treatises on roads, canals and bridges (Traité de la construction des chemins,1693; Traité sur les canaux de navigation, 1693; Traité des ponts, 1716), Gautier was a verbose author, curious about the scientific advances of his time and attentive to his contemporaries’ opinions on art and history. Well-versed in earth sciences, he was also interested in the formation of the earth’s crust, about which he wrote Nouvelles conjectures sur le globe de la terre, published in 1723 in a work with much wider intellectual ambitions entitled La bibliothèque des philosophes et des savants. An archeologist and antiquarian, he was also one of the first engineers to be interested in antique architecture, and more widely in the heritage of past generations. Thus in 1720 he published a Histoire de la ville de Nîmes et de ses antiquités accompanied by plates and plans of all the Roman antiquities of the city. He also wrote L’art de laver ou nouvelle maniere de peindre sur le papier (1687) which he rrepublished in a revised form under the title L’art de dessiner proprement les plans, porfils, elevations geometrales, & perspectives (1697). Émilie d’Orgeix (Université Michel de Montaigne – Bordeaux III) – 2013
Critical bibliographyA. Brunot & R. Coquand, Le Corps des Ponts et Chaussées, coll. “Histoire de l’administration française”, Paris, CNRS Éditions, 1982. F. Ellenberger, “À l’aube de la géologie moderne: Henri Gautier (1660-1737)”, Revue d’histoire des sciences, 1980, 33, 3, p. 279.
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