Imperial Secrecy versus Scientific Exploration. Nicolas Thiéry de Menonville’s Botanical Mission to Bring Cochineal from Colonial Mexico to Saint-Domingue
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Biersack, MartinEditorial
Cambridge University Press
Fecha
2025-05-14Referencia bibliográfica
Martin Biersack. Itinerario (2025), 1–25. DOI:10.1017/S0165115325000130
Patrocinador
Gerda-Henkel-Stiftung; Fritz Thyssen Stiftung; ERC Consolidator Grant; Universidad de Granada / CBUAResumen
This article deals with the French botanist Nicolas Joseph Thiéry de Menonville who in 1777 went to
Oaxaca (Mexico) in search of cochineal. Although cochineal was one of the Spanish Empire’s bestkept
secrets, he managed to go there, acquire knowledge about its cultivation from local planters,
and smuggle the insects on cacti to Saint-Domingue, where he successfully raised them. His voyage
is, thus, a paradigmatic case that illustrates how botanical knowledge and objects from local
Indigenous farmers were transferred into the networks of European science. The analysis of how
the botanist managed to gain access to a space and knowledge that was actually closed to him is
embedded within a broader contextualization: starting with the examination of its main source,
Voyage à Guaxaca, the article reconstructs the scientific and economic discourse that led Thiéry
de Menonville to undertake his voyage. It concludes with contemporaries’ evaluation of Thiéry
de Menonville’s transfer of knowledge about cochineal and its cultivation and the impact that his
successful mission had on comparable endeavors.