Jacques Arago
Jacques Étienne Victor Arago (6 March 1790 – 27 November 1855) was a French writer, artist and explorer, author of a Voyage Round the World.
Biography
Jacques was born in Estagel, Pyrénées-Orientales. He was the brother of François Arago (1786–1853), a scientist and politician, the most famous of the four Arago brothers. His two other brothers were Jean Arago (1788–1836), a general in the Mexican army; and Étienne Arago (1802–1892), a writer and politician.
Jacques Arago joined Louis de Freycinet on his 1817 voyage around the world aboard the ship Uranie, which inspired his witty Voyage autour du monde.[1]
On the Freycinet expedition to Hawaii in 1819, Arago "showed Rieourious a Camera obscura," the first such ever seen in the Hawaiian islands.
Although Arago lost his sight in 1837, he went on traveling and writing for the theater. In Curieux voyage autour du monde (1853), he tells of his round trip lipogrammatically, that is, without once using the letter "a".[2]
He died in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Over forty of his drawings were donated to the Honolulu Museum of Art by Frances Damon Holt.[3]
Gallery
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jacques Arago. |
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Ooro, One of the Principal Officers of Kamehameha II, pen and ink wash over graphite, 1819, Honolulu Museum of Art
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Tattooing, Sandwich Islands, Honolulu Museum of Art
See also
References
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External links
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- Pages with reference errors
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- 1790 births
- 1855 deaths
- People from Pyrénées-Orientales
- 19th-century French writers
- Writers from Languedoc-Roussillon
- French bird artists
- French illustrators
- French male writers
- 19th-century male writers
- French writer stubs