PSA: on #NationalUnicornDay Louis XV’s very own ‘Rhinoceros unicornis’ would like to remind you that you have JUST OVER 1 WEEK left to see ‘Versailles: Science and Splendour’ at the @sciencemuseum !!! 🦏🦄
Optical microscope, by Claude-Siméon Passemant with bronze-work attributed to Jacques and Philippe Caffieri, ca. 1750.
National Museum of the Palaces of Versailles and Trianon, inv. V.2021.42.
All photos my own.
It’s World Microscope Day! 🔬
This fabulous rococo microscope was made by Claude-Siméon Passemant - King Louis XV had an identical one.
On loan from @CVersailles, you can see it on display in ‘Versailles: Science and Splendour’ at London’s @sciencemuseum until 21 April 2025!
On display in London at the Science Museum’s exhibition ‘Versailles: Science and Splendour’, until 21 April 2025!
Jean-Dominique Cassini’s Map of the Moon, 1679
Paris Observatory Library, inv. I.1576
All photos my own (excuse the occasional moiré effects - not part of the OG!)
Cassini presented his Moon map to the French Royal Academy of Sciences on this day (18 Feb) in 1679. Invited to work for the Academy by King Louis XIV, Cassini left his native Bologna to study the Moon from the recently founded Paris Observatory.
Decoration by Jean-Siméon and Jean-Hugues Rousseau, 1788
1. Owl of Athena/Minerva, goddess of wisdom and science 🦉
2. Armillary sphere (model of the heavens) and telescope 🔭
3. Celestial globe with zodiac band ✨
All photos my own
This gilded imagery contains scientific symbols and motifs, a reminder of Louis’ keen interest in the sciences. Find out more at the @sciencemuseum exhibition ‘Versailles: Science and Splendour’, on in London until 21 April 2025!
Fireworks inspo for #NYE Versailles-style💥
With an explosion of ribbons, festoons and squiggles of light, this print depicts a spectacular fireworks display which took place at #Versailles on 18 August 1674. You can almost hear the fizz, bang, and screech of the pyrotechnics.
The celebrations were staged on the canal in the palace grounds. You can see men in boats lighting fireworks, while King Louis XIV watches from beneath a canopy.
On display in London at the @sciencemuseum exhibition ‘Versailles: Science and Splendour’ until 21 April 2025.
Like the menagerie’s other animals, the rhino was dissected after death for anatomical study. And if he looks a bit rotund now, it’s because he was overstuffed when he was taxidermised in 1793! His permanent home is the Muséum national d’histoire naturelle, Paris.
Photo my own.
Meet King Louis XV’s rhino - the OG chonky boi! 🦏 👑
#OnThisDay in 1769, he was sent from India to France as a gift for the French king. And until April 2025 you can see him in London at the Science Museum’s #Versailles
exhibition which I helped to curate!
🧵…
The naturalist Buffon came to observe the rhino living at Versailles, describing his hide like the bark of an old elm tree and commenting on his, er, apparently v small penis for such a large animal… 🍆