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COMTE DE JEAN ANTOINE CLAUDE CHAPTAL

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Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 855 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COMTE DE
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JEAN ANTOINE CLAUDE CHAPTAL
  CHANTELour (1756–1832), French chemist and statesman, was born at Nogaret,
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Lozere, on the 4th of
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June 1756 . The son of an apothecary, he studied chemistry at
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Montpellier, obtaining his doctor's diploma in 1777, when he repaired to Paris . In 1781 the States of
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Languedoc founded a chair of chemistry for him at the school of
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medicine in Montpellier, where he taught the doctrines of Lavoisier . The capital he acquired by the
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death of a wealthy
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uncle he employed in the establishment of chemical
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works for the manufacture of the
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mineral acids,
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alum, white-lead, soda and other substances . His labours in the cause of applied science were at length recognized by the French government, which presented him with letters of
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nobility, and the cordon of the order of Saint Michel . During the Revolution a publication by Chaptal, entitled
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Dialogue entre un Montagnard et un Girondin, caused him to be arrested; but being speedily set at liberty through the intermission of his friends, he undertook, in 1793, the management of the saltpetre works at Grenelle . In the following
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year he went to Montpellier, where he remained till 1797, when he returned to Paris . After the coup d'etat of the 18th of
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Brumaire (November 9, 1799) he was made a councillor of state by the First Consul, and succeeded Lucien
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Bonaparte as minister of the interior, in which capacity he established a chemical manufactory near Paris, a school of arts, and a society of
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industries; he also reorganized the hospitals, introduced the metrical
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system of weights and
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measures, and otherwise greatly encouraged the arts and sciences . A misunderstanding between him and
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Napoleon (who conferred upon him the title of comte de Chanteloup) occasioned Chaptal's retirement from office in 1804; but before the end of that year he was again received into favour by the emperor, who bestowed on him the
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grand
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cross of the Legion of Honour, and made him treasurer to the conservative senate . On Napoleon's return from Elba, Chaptal was made director-general of commerce and manufactures and a minister of state . He was obliged after the downfall of the emperor to withdraw into private
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life; and his name was removed from the list of the peers of France until 1819 . In 1816, however, he was nominated a member of the Academy of Sciences by Louis XVIII .

Chaptal was especially a popularizer of science, attempting to apply to

industry and agriculture the discoveries of chemistry . In this way he contributed largely to the development of
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modern industry . He died at Paris on the 3oth of
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July 1832 . FIis
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literary works exhibit both vigour and perspicuity of style; he wrote, in addition to various articles, especially in the Annales de chimie, Elemens de chimie (3 vols., 1790; new ed., 1796–1803); Traite du salpetre et
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des goudrons (1796); Tableau des principaux sets terreux (1798); Essai sur le perfectionnement des arts chimiques en France (1800);
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Art de faire, de gouverner, et de perfectionner
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les vins (i vol., 18o1 ; new ed., 1819) ; Traite theorique et pratique sur la culture de la vigne, &c . (2 vols., 1801 ; new ed., 1811); Essai sur le blanchiment (18o1); La Chimie appliquee aux arts (4 vols., 1806); Art de la teinture du coton en rouge (18w); Art du teinturier et du degraisseur (1800); De l'industrie francaise (2 vols., 1819); Chimie appliquee a l'agriculture (2 vols., 1823; new ed., 1829) .

End of Article: COMTE DE JEAN ANTOINE CLAUDE CHAPTAL
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