Savigny and the Sacred Ibis
(Click on the images to enlarge)
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Jules-César Savigny, from Louis Reybaud, Histoire de lexpédition française en Égypte (Paris 1830-36) v. 8. |
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An ibis hieroglyph, from Jules-César Savigny, Histoire naturelle et mythologique de libis (Paris, 1805) |
The natural historians of the Institute of
Egypt studied all of the native birds, but
they took a keen interest in the ibis, which
seemed to have a special place in Egyptian
culture. Ibis appeared frequently on
tomb paintings, and the French found their
mummified remains by the hundreds.
Herodotus, the Greek historian, related a
story told to him about the supposed annual
invasion of Egypt by flying snakes, which was
controlled by flocks of ibis flying out to meet
and devour them. And the French found that,
typically, the mummified remains of ibis
specimens did have snakes in their stomach
cavities. However, Jules-César Savigny, who
investigated the habits of the ibis, discovered
that the ibis eats shellfish, not snakes, and he
noted that the embalmers had apparently
been serving truths deeper than mere facts of
natural history.
Savignys treatise on the
Natural and
Mythological History of the Ibis was published
in 1805, before any volumes of the
Description had appeared, and so it was one of the first
publications to appear in print that was based
on research in Egypt during the Napoleonic
campaign. With his precise methods of
dissectionand observation, combined with
his knowledge of classical Greek and Latin
authors, Savigny cleared up questions about
both the history and zoology of the ibis.
Savigny was twenty-eight years old when he
finished writing his book on the ibis. He
had been recruited to join the scientific
contingent of the expedition to Egypt when
he was only twenty-one, and he had been
trained as a botanist, not a zoologist. The
zoologist Georges Cuvier had declined to go
with Napoleon, but he had recommended
Savigny in his place, thinking highly enough
of the young scientist to discount his lack of
zoological training. He could learn the
science, Cuvier said of Savigny.
Cuvier was right. Savigny was responsible,
along with Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, for the
zoology sections of the
Description de lÉgypte.
The plates were engraved between 1805 and
1814, and Savigny contributed all of the
ornithology sections and supplemented other
sections on vertebrates. The invertebrates are
represented on 105 plates
with thousands of
drawings, all of them
from Savignys research.
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Black ibis and sared (white) ibis from Description de lÉgypte Histoire naturelle,
v .1 |
Savignys birds, particularly, are noted for their
elegant presentation and
detailed precision. He
worked closely with the
artists to supervise
preparation of the plates.
But Savigny was unable to
write annotations for the
plates. A neurological
disorder struck him in the
1820s and made it impossible for him to
work, or even be spoken to about work.
Although he did not go blind and could read
for short periods, he could not tolerate light
and had to wear a veil of black netting. A
young naturalist, Victor Audouin, who had
not been a member of the Egyptian scientific
contingent and was not allowed to speak to
Savigny, was asked to identify and describe
Savignys illustrations based on secondary
sources and the evidence of the
drawings themselves. Savigny
was not supposed to be told of
this arrangement, but somehow
he learned of it. His own copy of
the
Description de lÉgypte,
which has been preserved, is
annotated with his many
objections and corrections to
Audouins frequent mistakes.
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Ibis mummies, from Description de lÉgypte Antiquités v.2 |
Cuvier, who had sent
Savigny to Egypt in his stead,
took a great interest in the ibis
mummies, for the ancient
remains were absolutely
identical to the skeletons of the modern ibis.
This seemed to be evidence for the fixity of
species, and against the evolutionary ideas of
his compatriot, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck. Cuvier
included discussions of the ibis and its fixed
skeletal type in the introduction to his
Recherches sur les Ossemens Fossiles (1812),
which was subsequently published separately
in many editions as the
Discourse sur les
Revolutions de la Surface du Globe.
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