
audiobook
by Antoine Poissonnier-Desperrières, chevalier de La Coudraye
MÉMOIRE SUR LES AVANTAGES QU'IL Y AUROIT A CHANGER ABSOLUMENT LA NOURRITURE DES GENS DE MER.
MÉMOIRE Sur les avantages qu'il y auroit à changer absolument la nourriture des Gens de mer.
OBSERVATIONS SUR LE MÉMOIRE De M. Poissonnier Desperrières, Par M. le Chevalier de la Coudraye, Enseigne de Vaisseau.
MÉMOIRE EN RÉPONSE A M. DE LA COUDRAYE, Enseigne de Vaisseau, Sur le Régime Végétal, Par M. POISSONNIER DESPERRIÈRES.
In this persuasive memorandum, a senior naval physician argues that the salty, meat‑heavy rations traditionally given to sailors are the chief cause of scurvy and other debilitating illnesses at sea. Drawing on a series of recent voyages, he presents concrete examples where crews suffered severe outbreaks of the disease while subsisting on salted provisions, and where a simple shift to rice, dried legumes, prune‑fruit and a touch of honey dramatically restored health. The author stresses that empirical facts, rather than abstract reasoning, should drive any reform of naval diet.
He calls on the highest authorities to adopt a plant‑based regimen for all seamen, noting that the natural foods he recommends are both more wholesome and surprisingly palatable. By highlighting successful experiments on several French vessels, the treatise makes a compelling case that a modest change in provisioning could safeguard the lives of countless sailors and strengthen the fleet’s overall effectiveness.
Language
fr
Duration
~1 hours (80K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Laurent Vogel and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2013-12-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1722–1793
An eighteenth-century French physician of the navy and colonies, he wrote practical, ambitious works on sailors’ health, tropical fevers, and diet at sea. His books capture a moment when medicine, empire, and everyday survival were tightly bound together.
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d. 1815
A French naval officer, political figure, and writer, he moved between science, public life, and the sea. His surviving work includes practical and speculative writing on navigation, winds, and maritime reform.
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