Titre : Two Centuries of Arts and Science in Nice and Villefranche: 1) The Ancestors: 1800 to 1900 Auteurs : Christian Sardet, Revue : Art and Science Numéro : Special issue Volume : 8 Date : 2024/07/22 DOI : 10.21494/ISTE.OP.2024.1182 ISSN : 2515-8767 Résumé : We tell the story of the exploring the flora and fauna of the Nice region, and in particular of pelagic organisms. This quest is the work of some twenty biologists associated with painters. In 1800, Antoine Risso, Jean Gabriel Prêtre, François Péron and Alexandre Lesueur described and painted flowers, fish and some marine invertebrates. In the middle of the century, Jean Baptiste Vérany, a naturalist from Nice, welcomed prestigious German and Swiss biologists - Johannes Müller, Rudolf Leuckart, Ernst Haeckel and Carl Vogt - who explored little known organisms such as siphonophores and radiolarians. And in the 1880s, Hermann Fol, Jules Barrois and Alexis Korotneff set up a marine station in Villefranche sur Mer, recognized as an exceptional site for the study of plankton. During this period, the Natural History Museum of Nice was enriched by the exceptional collections of flowers, fish and funghi assembled by Risso, Vérany and Jean Baptiste Barla, who employed Vincent Fossat for his talent as painter / illustrator. By the end of the century, the Nice region attracted foreign royalty and aristocrats, visiting biologists and impressionists painters. In a companion article (Sardet 2024 / 2 Les modernes - from 1970 to 2024) we show that organisms explored in the 19th century are still the subject of research at the Institut de la Mer de Villefranche (IMEV). Éditeur : ISTE OpenScience