GABRIELLE EMILIE
LE TONNELIER DE BRETEUIL
MARQUISE DU CHÂTELET
(1706-49)
Writings
Gabrielle Emilie
le Tonnelier de Breteuil, born in Paris, 17 Dec. 1706 to a
well-connected noble family, had every privilege for a little
girl of her time. Her father, the baron de Breteuil was a
favorite of the king, Louis XIV, and both he and her mother
Anne de Froullay had relatives and friends who could help to
advance the family’s interests. When she was eighteen,
in 1725, they arranged for their only daughter to marry into
one of the oldest lineages of Lorraine, a semi-independent
duchy in northeastern France. The marquis Du Châtelet brought
his title but little wealth. For the first years of her
marriage, the new marquise lived a very traditional life: she
bore him a daughter and two sons, ran their first household
in Semur where he was the military governor, and when it was
appropriate enjoyed all the pleasures of Paris: dressing
elegantly, going to the theater and the opera, gambling at
the houses of her noble friends.
Probably in 1733 when she was once again in Semur awaiting
the birth of her second son, Du Châtelet became interested in
mathematics and began to read widely in philosophy and other
learned subjects. She returned to Paris to take up serious
study of Descartes’ analytical geometry first with
Pierre-Louis Moreau de Maupertuis and then with his
colleague, the young mathematics prodigy Alexis-Claude
Clairaut. From this point on, though Du Châtelet continued to
care for her husband’s and children’s interests
and ran the household–taking extra responsibilities
when the marquis had to rejoin his troops for the wars of the
1730s and 1740s–she found time to continue reading,
studying and finally writing and publishing her own works of
“natural philosophy,” the equivalent to our
modern “science.”
Little is known about her early education. It is likely that
she was allowed to study Latin and geometry with her younger
brother, but otherwise she was self-taught. By the time she
published her first book, Institutions
de physique (Foundations of
Physics) in 1740, she had read widely in Latin, English, and
Italian in fields as diverse as moral philosophy, chemistry,
physics, theology, mathematics, metaphysics, natural and
experimental philosophy. The essay she submitted to the 1738
Royal Academy of Sciences competition “on the nature
and propagation of fire” had been published, and she
had been accepted as a member of the learned Republic of
Letters. She gained additional fame when she bested the
executive director of the Academy of Sciences on the issue of
the proper formula for kinetic energy, saw her writings on
science translated into Italian and German, and was elected
to the Bologna Academy of Science. Just before her death 10
Sept. 1749 from a pulmonary embolism, a consequence of her
last pregnancy, she had completed a translation of Isaac
Newton’s Principia
and
her own commentary on it, that both corrected and completed
many of the Englishman’s key hypotheses proving the
role of attraction in the universe. Published in final form
ten years later in 1759, as part of the excitement occasioned
by the return of Halley’s comet– calculating a
comet’s orbit had been one of the main proofs of
attraction.
The rest of Du Châtelet’s writings circulated among the
learned, part of the clandestine literature of this first
half of the Enlightenment. Her Discours sur
le bonheur (Discourse on
Happiness), a very personal exposition of what makes for our
happiness– was first published in 1779 . Others exist
only in manuscripts dispersed throughout libraries in France,
Belgium and Russia. They include: a reworking and translation
into French of sections of Bernard Mandeville’s
Fable of the
Bees; a massive
critical commentary on the Old and New Testaments,
Examens de la
Bible; short essays on
optics, liberty, and grammar.
Until the last decade, Du Châtelet was best known because of
her two lovers: Voltaire, the French poet, playwright
and philosophe,
who was her companion for fifteen years, even after he took
his niece as a lover; Jean-François de Saint-Lambert, the
young soldier-poet with whom she fell in love in 1748. He was
the father of her last child, the daughter who occasioned her
death on 10 Sept. 1749.
Du Châtelet is significant not only for her writings–
hers remains the only full translation of the
Principia
in
French– but also for what her life and accomplishments
tell about the possibilities for a woman of her day. She
read, studied, wrote, published, and gained recognition in a
learned world meant to be exclusively male. That all but her
amorous life was lost to history, her writings forgotten or
attributed to others, demonstrates how fragile women’s
stories are and how important they are to discover and tell.
SUGGESTED READING
Judith P. Zinsser. La Dame
d’Esprit: A Biography of the Marquise Du
Châtelet. New York:
Viking, 2006.
Judith P. Zinsser and Julie Candler Hayes, eds.
Emile Du
Châtelet: Rewriting Enlightenment
Philosophy and Science.
SVEC
[Studies on
Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century] (2006:1)
Elisabeth Badinter. Les Passions
intellectuelles. Paris: Fayard,
1999.
Mary Terrall.”Vis Viva.” History of
Science 42 (2004):
189-209.
René Vaillot. Avec Mme Du
Châtelet. 1734-1749. Edited by René
Pomeau. Vol. I, Voltaire en
son temps. Oxford:
Voltaire Foundation, 1985-95.