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Bernard de Jussieu

French botanist
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Bernard de Jussieu, detail from an engraving
Bernard de Jussieu
Born:
Aug. 17, 1699, Lyon
Died:
Nov. 6, 1777, Paris (aged 78)
Notable Family Members:
brother Antoine de Jussieu
brother Joseph de Jussieu
Subjects Of Study:
plant
taxonomy

Bernard de Jussieu (born Aug. 17, 1699, Lyon—died Nov. 6, 1777, Paris) was a French botanist who founded a method of plant classification based on the anatomical characters of the plant embryo. After studying medicine at Montpellier, he became in 1722 subdemonstrator of plants in the Jardin du Roi, Paris. In 1759 he was invited to develop a botanical garden at the Petit Trianon at Versailles. His arrangement of the plants there reflected the ideas of the Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus but was the beginning of a system that his nephew, Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu, later developed into a new system of plant classification. Bernard was a brother of Antoine and Joseph.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.