Nicolas Bachelier
Nicolas Bachelier | |
---|---|
Born | 1485 |
Died |
1557 Toulouse, France |
Nationality | French |
Occupation | French surveyor, architect, and mason. |
Nicolas Bachelier (1485–1557) was a French surveyor, architect, and mason.[1]
In 1539, Bachelier and his colleague Arnaud Casanove, who described themselves as expert levelers, proposed a survey for a canal from Toulouse to Carcassonne to Francis I. Francis I had previously discussed the possibility of such a canal with Leonardo da Vinci. They also proposed that barges could either float down the Garonne River to Bordeaux or could traverse a canal parallel to the river. Francis I approved their plans [2] which included a lock-free canal of variable depth. These plans proved to be inaccurate and could not be executed. In 1598, Henri IV re-examined the plans, but nothing was done until Pierre Paul Riquet began the successful endeavor of the Canal du Midi in 1662.[1]