Guillaume-Antoine Olivier
| Guillaume Antoine Olivier | |
|---|---|
|  Guillaume Antoine Olivier | |
| Born | 19 January 1756 | 
| Died | 1 October 1814 (aged 58) | 
| Residence | France | 
| Citizenship |  France | 
| Nationality | French | 
| Fields | |
Guillaume-Antoine Olivier (19 January 1756, Toulon – 1 October 1814, Lyon) was a French entomologist.
Life
Olivier studied medicine in Montpellier, where he became good friends with Pierre Marie Auguste Broussonet. With Jean Guillaume Bruguière and Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, he collaborated in the creation of Journal d'Histoire Naturelle (1792). Afterwards, he served as a naturalist on a 6-year scientific journey that took him to Asia Minor, Persia, Egypt, Cyprus and Corfu. He returned to France in 1798 with a large collection of natural history specimens from his travels. Later, he was associated with the École nationale vétérinaire d'Alfort, where in 1811, he was appointed professor of zoology.[1]
Works

Olivier was the author of Coléoptères Paris Baudouin 1789 -1808 (11 editions), Entomologie, ou histoire naturelle des Insectes (1808) and Le Voyage dans l'Empire Othoman, l'Égypte et la Perse (1807). He was a close friend of Johan Christian Fabricius and a patron of Pierre André Latreille.[2]
Legacy
Today, most of his collection is housed at the Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris.[3]
References
|  | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Guillaume-Antoine Olivier. | 
- ↑ JSTOR Global Plants (biography)
- ↑ "Guillaume Olivier 1756–1814". University of Nebraska–Lincoln. Retrieved October 2, 2010.
- ↑ University of Nebraska-Lincoln State Museum - Division of Entomology (biographical information)
External links
- Voyage dans l'empire Othoman, l'Égypte et la Perse, fait par ordre du gouvernement, pendant les six premières années de la république; par G.A. Olivier (1800): Vol I - Vol II - [ Vol III] - [ Vol IV] - Vol V - Vol VI
| 
 |