Flornoy in 1936 became special advisor to the
National Museum of Natural History, which sends mission studies and exploration in the
Amazon Basin and the
Andes. Flornoy specialized in the
Upper Amazon of Peru, and in 1941 and 1942 discovered the sources of the
Marañón River, a constituent of the Amazon. As an archaeologist, Flornoy was particularly interested in pre-Columbian civilisations and unearthed the remains of a pre-Incan civilisation. Of the 101 sites explored in the
Tantamayo region, 25 were studied in particular in 1955 and 1956 in the company of Marc Corcos. Many of the monuments discovered, such as those at
Piruro, Japallán, Selmín Granero and
Susupillo, reveal a type of architecture previously unknown in South America (3- and 4-storey buildings). Bertrand Flornoy and Marc Corcos discovered the ‘Empire of Yarovilca’, a hitherto unknown pre-Inca civilisation that had not been located since the Spanish conquest (‘Journal de la Société des Américanistes’, 1956: Volume 45, Number 45, Pp 237-238 / 1957: Volume 46, Number 46, Pp 207-226). In 1937, Bertrand Flornoy was one of the founding members of the ‘Club des explorateurs français’, which later became the
Société des explorateurs français. He was its president in 1946, then from 1948 to 1952 and from 1956 to 1980. A member of the Central Commission of the Geographical Society, he was also a member of the
Explorers Club of New York.
Scientific and documentary works Bertrand Flornoy wrote many books about his expeditions1. According to André Chennevière, Bertrand Flornoy's ‘remarkable work on Amazonia’ has undeniable ‘scientific value’, but is less accessible than that of
Ferreira de Castro. Flornoy also made several documentary films between 1947 and 1953. In 1955 he made a sound recording about the Iawa and
Bora Indians, which won him the Grand Prix du disque de l'
Académie Charles-Cros.
MP for 15 years Under the
French Fifth Republic (1958-) created by President
Charles de Gaulle (1958-1969), Bertrand Flornoy entered politics in 1959, becoming national youth delegate for the
Union for the New Republic (UNR). He was a
Gaullist deputy for
Seine-et-Marne from 1962 to 1978, and was re-elected three times. He was also mayor of
Coulommiers in Seine-et-Marne. ==Works==