User:Nic Yost/Marie-Aimée Lullin
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Life
[edit]Marriage
[edit]She married François Huber (1750-1831), the famous blind entomologist,[1][2] on 28 April 1776 in Geneva, Republic of Geneva after having to wait seven years to do so. Lullin had become friends with Huber at 17 when they were dance partners,[3] but Marie's father would not allow her to marry, at so young an age, a man with failing eyesight.[2] Instead of abandoning Huber, she decided to wait until she had attained the age of 25, when she was legally allowed choose a husband despite the disapproval of her father.[1][2][3]Their marriage was such a love story that they were the inspiration for the novel Delphine by Germaine de Staël and was noticed by Voltaire in their correspondence.[3] Marie stood with her husband as a life-long partner and helped to alleviate his blindness where she could, so that he never truly felt misfortune in being blind.[4]
Her death in 1822 affected her husband deeply, causing him to slow down, under the care of their daughter, Marie Anne Huber.[3][4]
Personality
[edit]She was described as having a small stature while also being incredibly full of life, so much that Huber would apply the same characteristics of the bees to his wife.[3] [4]Her husband's description of her was "mens magna in corpore parvo," which translates to "great mind in a small body."[3][4] Huber then applied this description to the bees, describing them with the phrase, "Ingentes animos angusto in pectore versant," translating to "Their little bodies lodge a mighty soul."[2]
Research
[edit]Marie was considered "one of the earliest women to study insects experimentally."[5] Marie became her husband's "reader, secretary and observer."[2][3] Together with their son Pierre and a servant, François Burnens, she helped Huber carry out his experiments that laid the foundations of scientific knowledge with regard to the life and biology of the honey bee.[2][3] While her roles were never specified in their work, she was described as "a good pair of eyes for him,"[4] especially as blindness fully set in. She and Burnens would make the observations through Huber's questioning, and then he would come to his own conclusions.[4] In volume one of Huber's book, Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles (New Observations on Bees), Burnens received recognition for his assistance in the preface, whereas Lullin did not.[4][6] When Burnens had left Huber, Marie had gained a larger role, doing more of the investigations and all of the observations while working with Pierre.[2][5] Pierre would go on to be an editor for volume two of Huber's book, where Marie was still uncredited.[2][7]
Their discoveries on bees include the mating processes of the queen, the communicative function of the antenna, the production of wax, and the process of how drones left the hive.[2][4][5]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Lullin family tree by Lionel Rossellat - "Marie Aimée Lullin". Geneanet. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i American Bee Journal. Dadant & Sons. 1861. p. 214.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal. 1833.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Johns, Bennett George (1867). Blind People: Their Works and Ways; with Sketches of the Lives of Some Famous Blind Men. J. Murray.
- ^ a b c Alic, Margaret (1986). Hypatia's Heritage: A History of Women in Science from Antiquity through the Nineteenth Century. Boston: Beacon Press. p. 116. ISBN 080706730X.
- ^ Huber, François (1814). Nouvelles observations sur les abeilles (in French). Chez J.J. Paschoud.
- ^ Huber (naturaliste), François (1814). Nouvelles observations sur les abeilles (in French). J.J. Paschoud.