Abel Foullon

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Born1513
France
Diedc. 1563–1565
OccupationsWriter, Engineer, Director of the Mint
KnownforInventor of the holometer; patent specification "Usage & Description de l'holomètre"
Abel Foullon
Born1513
France
Diedc. 1563–1565
OccupationsWriter, Engineer, Director of the Mint
Known forInventor of the holometer; patent specification "Usage & Description de l'holomètre"
SpouseCatherine Clouet
ChildrenBenjamin Foullon (portrait painter and miniaturist)
RelativesJean Clouet (father-in-law), François Clouet (brother-in-law)

Abel Foullon (15131563 or 1565, in France) was a writer, director of the Mint for Henry II of France and also an engineer to the king of France after Leonardo da Vinci. In 1545 he married Catherine Clouet, the daughter of the portrait painter Jean Clouet and sister of the portrait painter François Clouet. Their son Benjamin Foullon or Foulon also became a portrait painter and miniaturist.

Usaige et description de l'holomètre, 1567[1]

Foullon invented a holometre, an instrument for making of angular measurements for surveying. In 1551, Henry II granted Foullon a 10-year exclusive patent monopoly on the holometer in exchange for publishing a description of it. A description of an invention in a patent is called a patent “specification”. This first patent specification was entitled "Usage & Description de l'holomètre". Publication was delayed until after the patent expired in 1561.[2]

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