Early voyages Labillardière undertook his first voyage as a naturalist in 1783. Sent to
Britain by Le Monnier to study the exotic plants in cultivation there, he ended up staying almost two years, during which time he established enduring friendships with
Sir Joseph Banks,
James Edward Smith,
Aylmer Bourke Lambert and
George Williams. On returning from Britain, Labillardière immediately set out on a voyage through the
French Alps.
Near East Labillardière's early voyages seem to have fired a passion for exploring foreign lands because, on his return to Paris, he immediately began making plans for a voyage to the
Near East, in order to study the plants described by physicians of the
Islamic Golden Age. He again secured Le Monnier's sponsorship, and Le Monnier in turn secured the support of
France's foreign minister Charles Gravier, comte de Vergennes, making Labillardière's voyage virtually an official mission. Labillardière left Paris in November 1786, and departed France via
Marseille in February 1787. He travelled first to
Cyprus, then on to
Latakia,
Syria. From there he moved south along the coast as far as
Acre, before turning inland to
Nazareth, via the
Mount Carmel Range. From Nazareth, he headed north to
Damascus, visiting
Mount Hermon en route. He then crossed the
Mount Lebanon Range, arriving in
Tripoli in late June. After a detour to
Bsharri to see the
Cedars of Lebanon, he returned north along the coast, departing from Latakia in November. The following year, Labillardière made another voyage to the eastern
Mediterranean. Little is known of that voyage, except that he made landfall at
Crete,
Corsica,
Sardinia and
Lampedusa. The result of the two voyages was a collection of around 1000 specimens. As sponsor of the expedition, they were the property of Le Monnier, but Labillardière retained a great many duplicate specimens. The voyage also resulted in Labillardière's botanical account of the region, later published as
Icones plantarum Syriae rariorum. Only 55 taxa were published in it but, according to Duyker, "this was sufficient to secure for him a place among the founders of modern botany in the Near and Middle East".
Australia In 1791, Labillardière was appointed as a naturalist to
Bruni d'Entrecasteaux's expedition to
Oceania, in search of the lost ships of
Jean-François de Galaup, comte de La Pérouse. D'Entrecasteaux failed to find any trace of the missing expedition, but his ships visited south-west Australia,
Tasmania, the
North Island of New Zealand, and the
East Indies, where Labillardière,
Claude Riche and
Étienne Pierre Ventenat, assisted by gardener
Félix Delahaye, collected zoological, botanical and geological specimens, and described the customs and languages of the local
Indigenous Australians. While the expedition was exploring Oceania, the
French Revolutionary Wars had broken out in Europe and, when the ships reached
Java, Labillardière's scientific collections were seized by the British as spoils of war. Labillardière despaired at the loss of three years' painstaking work, but he had an ally in Joseph Banks, who campaigned for the return of the collections. In 1796, Banks's lobbying succeeded, and he was able to write to William Price at the
British Museum: ... his Majesty's Ministers have thought it necessary for the honour of the British nation and for the advancement of Science that the right of the Captors to the Collection should be on this occasion wav'd and that the whole should be returned to M. de Billardiere, in order that he may be able to publish his Observations on Natural History in a complete manner ... By this her Majesty will lose an acquisition to her herbarium, which I very much wish'd to see deposited there, but the national character of Great Britain will certainly gain much credit for holding a conduct towards Science and Scientific men liberal in the highest degree. Labillardière returned to France with his collections in 1796. In 1799, he published a popular account of his voyage,
Relation du Voyage à la Recherche de la Pérouse, and was elected to the
Académie des sciences. Between 1804 and 1807, he published
Novae Hollandiae Plantarum Specimen, In 1816, he was elected a foreign member of the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. ==Character==