Nicolas Louis
VAUQUELIN

16 May 1763 - 14 November 1829
He was born at St André d'Hébertot, in Normandy,
his father Nicolas Vauquelin being an estate manager. At fourteen, he became
assistant to a pharmacist in Rouen where he attended to lectures on chemistry
and pharmacy. After a short time, he went to Paris and worked for a pharmacist
named Chéradame, a cousin of the famous chemist Fourcroy. There he spent two
years learning Greek, Latin and the sciences. About 1785 Vauquelin became an
assistant in the laboratory of Fourcroy where he developed rapidly close
relationships with his master, resulting in over fifty joint publications.
He left Fourcroy's laboratory by 1792 and became the manager of a pharmacy and
thereafter a hospital pharmacist at Meaux. In September 1793 he organized in
Tours the production of saltpeter needed for gunpowder. In 1794 he resumed his
association with Fourcroy when he was appointed assistant professor of chemistry
at the new Ecole Centrale des Travaux Publics. In 1795 he was master in
pharmacy, became Inspecteur des Mines and was elected to the Institut de France.
The next year he was professor of chemistry at the Ecole de Pharmacie, and at
the Collège de France in 1801. In 1803 he became director of the Ecole de
Pharmacie on its foundation. In 1804, succeeding Brongniart, he became
Professeur de Chimie appliquée aux Arts, at the Jardin des Plantes, with
lodging and laboratories at the Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle.
He was ther once again a colleague of Fourcroy, whose death in 1809 left a
vacant chair in chemistry at the Faculté de médecine. He succeeded Fourcroy in
1811 but after gaining his doctorate of medicine by a famous thesis on the
composition of the brain (Analyse de la matière cérébrale de l'homme et de
quelques animaux, Paris, Med Fac, 1811, published in Ann Muséum Hist Nat 1811,
18, 212).
Vauquelin was dismissed in 1822 for holding too liberal political views but
pensioned in 1823. One year before his death he was elected to parliament as a
deputy for Calvados.
Vauquelin never married and lived from about 1790 with two sisters of Fourcroy
until they died.
The impact of his thesis on the brain analysis was rapid and widespread. The
text was reprinted in several scientific journals in France, England and
Germany. This work can be considered as one major stimulus for all subsequent
studies on brain lipids. Thudichum wrote in 1874 that "Vauquelin's data are
perfectly correct as far as they go; they furnished an excellent basis upon
which the moreperfects methods of later times might have built a complete
analysis of brain matter".
The most important chemical analysis of Vauquelin were made on vegetable and
animal substances. Thus, he discovered allantoin and asparagine (the first
ammino acid to be recognized), confirmed the existence of malic, quinic and
several other organic acids. He studied the comparative aspects of urea, uric
and hippuric acids. In the course of mineral analyses, he discovered in 1798
chromium and beryllium.
Vauquelin's friends were not only Fourcroy but also Lavoisier, Berthollet, Haüy,
Gay-Lussac, Pelletier. Among his pupils we can noticed Chevreul, Orfila,
Robiquet and Thénard, without missing several foreign scientists linked to the
French chemist group.