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Jeanne Villepreux-Power

French-born naturalist
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Also known as: Givovanne Power, Jeanne Villepreux, Jeannette Power
Also called:
Jeannette Power or Givovanne Power
Née:
Jeanne Villepreux
Born:
Sept. 25, 1794, Juillac, Limousin, France
Died:
Jan. 26, 1871, Juillac (aged 76)
Inventions:
aquarium
Subjects Of Study:
Argonauta argos

Jeanne Villepreux-Power (born Sept. 25, 1794, Juillac, Limousin, France—died Jan. 26, 1871, Juillac) French-born naturalist best known as the inventor of the aquarium and for her research on the paper nautilus Argonauta argo, a cephalopod that resembles members of the genus Octopus in most respects.

Villepreux-Power was the daughter of a shoemaker. She moved to Paris at age 18 and served as a dressmaker’s assistant. In 1816 she crafted a wedding gown for Princess Caroline, the eldest daughter of Francis I of the Two Sicilies, for her marriage to Charles-Ferdinand de Bourbon, the nephew of Louis XVIII of France. This work brought her fame and the attention of the successful English merchant James Power, whom she married in 1818 in Messina, Sicily. The couple remained in Sicily for several years, and during that time Villepreux-Power taught herself natural history and described the flora and fauna of the island.

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Inventors and Inventions

Between 1832 and 1843 Villepreux-Power closely studied the paper nautilus A. argo. In 1832 she invented the first recognizable glass aquarium to aid her observations and experiments on the species. Using that device, she became the first to discover that A. argo produces its own shell—rather than obtaining the shell from another organism, which was a prominent competing belief at the time. She later reasoned that the tiny organisms that accompanied the egg mass contained within the shell of A. argo were males of the species. (Later investigations by others revealed that those “organisms” were male reproductive organs that attached themselves to the female’s mantle.) Villepreux-Power also developed two other aquarium designs: a glass apparatus placed within a cage for use in shallow water and another cagelike aquarium capable of lowering its contents to various depths.

In 1839 Villepreux-Power published Observations et expériences physiques sur plusieurs animaux marins et terrestres (“Physical Observations and Experiments on Several Marine and Terrestrial Animals”), which recorded her work with A. argo and other animals. In 1842 she published Guida per la Sicilia (“Guide to Sicily”), a comprehensive survey of the island’s environment. The following year Villepreux-Power and her husband moved from Sicily to new residences in London and Paris. During the transit a major part of her collections, records, and other scientific materials was lost after the ship that carried those items sank. Although she continued to write after 1843, she discontinued her research.

Villepreux-Power belonged to more than a dozen academies, including the London Zoological Society and the Gioenian Academy of Natural Sciences in Catania. In 1858 British anatomist and paleontologist Richard Owen referred to Villepreux-Power as the mother of aquariophily. In 1997 a large crater on the surface of Venus was named for her.

John P. Rafferty