Destined to enter the orders, he abandoned the seminary in 1784 and turned to medicine.[3][4]
He studied at the University of Montpellier where he became a doctor of medicine in 1787. At the same time, he became interested in entomology and botany, particularly with Antoine Gouan.
He participated unsuccessfully in the competition for the medicine professorship of 1789-1790 opened on the death of professors Jean Sabatier and Jean-Charles de Grimaud.[5]
He died on active service during the campaign of 1794, when he had gone to serve voluntarily as a military doctor in hospitals.[1]
Works
On December 20, 1787, he read to the Royal Society of Sciences of Montpellier a memoir containing observations on a new genus of insect. The protonymDorthesia, given to a scale insect, was created in its honour following this first description on the leaves of a euphorbia (Euphorbia charachias) near Nîmes. The species Dorthesia characias was described by Arsène Thiébaut de Berneaud [fr].[6]
John Obadiah Westwood described the species Dorthesia seychellarum[7] later called Icerya seychellarum. The name Dorthesia was changed to Dorthezia and then to Orthezia.[8]
The same year, he joined the Royal Society of Sciences of Montpellier.[9] He successively published various productions relating to natural history and rural economy:
Observations of a singular phenomenon, caused by a multitude of black ants (Formica nigra) gathered in the atmosphere, which they obscure like a cloud;
He published a number of entomological articles in the “Mémoires de la Société royale d'agriculture de France” of which he was a corresponding member.[11]
He was also a competent geologist.[11] We owe him a dissertation on the rolled pebbles of the Rhône composed with the Baron de Servières and dissertations on other stones around Nîmes including variolite.[12]
^William Dwight Whitney (1890). The Century Dictionary. Vol. 15. New York: The Century Co. p. Orthezia, syn. of Dorthezia, named after Dorthes, a French physician (1759–94) (page 4160).