Background
She was born in Juillac, Corrèze, the eldest child of a shoemaker, and traveled to Paris to become a dressmaker.
She was born in Juillac, Corrèze, the eldest child of a shoemaker, and traveled to Paris to become a dressmaker.
The English biologist Professor Richard Owen referred to her as the "Mother of Aquariophily."
In 1816, she became well known for creating the wedding gown of Princess Caroline in her wedding to Charles-Ferdinand de Bourbon. In Sicily she began to study natural history, in particular she made physical observations and experiments on marine and terrestrial animals, pioneering the use of the aquarium. She wanted to inventory the island"s ecosystem.
Her Guida per la Sicilia has been republished by the Historical Society of Messina.
She also studied molluscs and their fossils, in particular she favoured Argonauta argo. At the time, there was uncertainty over whether the Argonaut species produced its own shell, or acquired that of a different organism (similar to hermit crabs).
Villepreux-Power"s work showed that they do indeed produce their own shells. Many of her records and scientific drawings were lost in a shipwreck.
In 1997 her name, "Villepreux-Power," was given to a crater on Venus discovered by the Magellan probe.
A biographical song about Jeanne Villepreux is featured on "26 Scientists Volume Two: Newton to Zeno". A 2008 album by the California band Artichoke.
She was the first woman member of the Catania Accademia, and a correspondent member of the London Zoological Society and sixteen other learned societies.