Louis-Bernard Guyton de Morveau (also Guyton-Morveau after the French Revolution; January 4, 1737–January 2, 1816) was a French chemist and politician. He is credited with producing the first systematic method of chemical nomenclature.
Although a member of the right wing, he voted in favor of the execution of King Louis XVI. Guyton de Morveau served on the Committee of Public Safety from April 6, 1793 to July 10, 1793, when he resigned in order to devote his time to the manufacture of firearms, and formation of a corps of balloonists for the French Revolutionary Army. He himself flew in a balloon during the battle of Fleurus on June 26, 1794, and assisted in several other battles.
Guyton de Morveau was made a baron of the First French Empire in 1811. He died in Paris five years after.
Deputies to the French National Convention | First French Empire | French chemists | French lawyers | French nobility | Members of the Académie des sciences | Natives of Dijon | 1737 births | 1816 deaths
Louis Bernard Guyton de Morveau | Louis-Bernard Guyton-Morveau
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