Jean-Baptiste Joannis Althen,[1] better simply known as Jean Althen (Hovhannès Althounian; 1709–1774), was an Armenian agronomist from Safavid Iran who developed the cultivation of madder in France.[2][3][4][5]

Jean Althen
Statue of Jean Althen in Avignon
Born
Hovhannès Althounian

1709 (1709)
Died1774 (aged 64–65)
Known forDeveloping madder cultivation in France

Although the plant had been present in the region before his arrival, it was Jean-Baptiste Althen who developed its cultivation, turning it into an industry.

Biography

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Jean-Baptiste was born to a certain "Althen and Catherine Madrecha" in the Safavid Empire, in a village he called "Chaouch".[1] Jean-Baptiste grew up in a time of much turmoil, as the Safavid Empire, then ruled by King (Shah) Sultan Husayn (r.1694–1722), was in a state of heavy decline. During the Afghan invasion, Jean-Baptiste's parents were killed while he was enslaved and brought to Kayseri in the Ottoman Empire.[1] According to Sibylla Schuster-Walser / Encyclopædia Iranica, in Kayseri, "he learned cotton cultivation and dyeing".[1] In ca. 1736, Jean-Baptiste managed to escape and moved to France.[1]

In France, he received authorization by incumbent King Louis XV (r.1715–1774) "to start state-aided cotton fields".[1] When it became apparent that his efforts to grow cotton had been in vain, Jean-Baptiste started cultivating "Oriental madder" in Avignon in 1754, with great success.[1] Associated with a local landlord, Clauseau Aïné, he produced a crop of 2500 kg (5500 lbs) in 1769. Sibylla Schuster-Walser notes that madder "soon became a main crop of the region".[1] Jean-Baptiste died in poverty in 1774.[1]

In 1846, about 70 years after his death, Jean-Baptiste was honored for his efforts as the French erected a statue of him in Avignon.[1] A French commune, Althen-des-Paluds, is named after him, as well as statues and streets in several cities of the south of France. The plant genus Althenia is also named after him.[6]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Schuster-Walser 1989, p. 912.
  2. ^ Dédéyan 2007, p. 919.
  3. ^ Henri 2000, pp. 188–195.
  4. ^ Bradshaw 1807, p. 110.
  5. ^ Secretary of Agriculture 1848, p. 192.
  6. ^ "Genus Althenia". CasaBio. Retrieved 28 April 2024.

Sources

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Further reading

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  • Horan, Joseph (2015). "King Cotton on the Middle Sea: acclimatization projects and the French links to the early modern Mediterranean". French History. 29 (1): 93–108. doi:10.1093/fh/cru118.
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