Early years Pierre René Jean Baptiste Henri Brocard was born on 12 May 1845, in
Vignot,
Meuse to Elizabeth Auguste Liouville and Jean Sebastien Brocard. He attended the
Lycée in
Marseille as a young child, and then the Lycée in
Strasbourg. After graduating from the Lycée he entered the
Academy in
Strasbourg where he was prepared for the examination for entrance to the prestigious
École Polytechnique in
Paris, to which he was accepted in 1865.
École Polytechnique and military years Brocard attended the École Polytechnique from 1865 to 1867. He joined the
Société Mathématique de France in 1873, just a year after its founding. In 1875, he was inducted into the French Association for the Advancement of Science as well as the French Meteorological Society. He was shortly after sent to northern
Africa, where he served as a military technician for the French forces stationed in
Algiers, the seat of French Africa. While in Algiers, Brocard founded the Meteorological Institute of Algiers.
Discovery of Brocard points During a meeting of the French Association for the Advancement of Science, Brocard presented a self-written article entitled ''Etudes d'un nouveau cercle du plan du triangle'', his first paper on the
Brocard points, the
Brocard triangle, and the
Brocard circle, all of which today bear his name.
Later years In 1884 Brocard returned to France. He served with the Meteorological Commission in
Montpellier before moving to
Grenoble and lastly
Bar-le-duc. He honorably retired from the French military in 1910 as a
lieutenant colonel. His remaining two major publications were
Notes de bibliographie des courbes géométriques (1897, 1899, published in two volumes) and the
Courbes géométriques remarquables (1920, posthumous 1967, also published in two volumes) which was written in collaboration with Timoléon Lemoyne. Brocard attended the
International Congress of Mathematicians at
Zurich in 1897,
Paris in 1900,
Heidelberg in 1904,
Rome in 1908,
Cambridge, England in 1912, and
Strasbourg in 1920. Brocard spent the last years of his life in
Bar-le-Duc. He was offered the presidency of Bar-le-Duc's
Letters, Sciences, and Arts Society, of which he had been a longtime member and correspondent for several foreign academies of, but declined. He died on 16 January 1922 while on a trip to
Kensington,
London,
England. ==Contributions==