François L’Anglois

François L’Anglois (c. 1621)
Plate from Livre de Fleurs

François L’Anglois (12 May 1589 in Chartres – 14 January 1647 in Paris)[1] was a French painter, engraver, printer, bookseller, publisher and art dealer, best known for his 1620 book "Livre de Fleurs", a compendium of garden flowers, birds and insects.[2]

L’Anglois ran a workshop in Paris from where he turned out and sold engraved prints. He designed the title page for "Livre de Fleurs" and had the botanical plates engraved by the German, Léonard Gaultier (1561–1641), also resident in Paris, Claude Savary, and Barthélémy Gaultier, the editor being Jean Le Clerc. The remaining plates were drawn and engraved by L’Anglois.[3]

L’Anglois also published Pierre de Sainte-Marie Magdeleine's "Traitté d'horlogiographie" in 1645, a treatise on timekeeping, methods for determining the time both by day and by night, the timing of tides, how to cut geometrically regular shapes from stone or wood, and all aspects of measurement and projection.[4] Nicolas l'Anglois, a brother or son of François, published another edition of the book in 1657 in Paris.[5]

Some selected works published by François L’Anglois

References

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