René Grillet

By admin , 21 December 2015
René
Grillet
Male
0
Description

Designer of a mechanical calculating machine in the 17th century, Grillet was a French mechanic and watchmaker who came from Rouen in northwestern France, the capital city of Normandy, and served as watchmaker to King Louis XIV. In 1673 he published a small book, Curiositez mathematiques de l'invention du Sr Grillet horlogeur a Paris, in which he announced the invention of an arithmetical calculating machine. A few years later, in 1678, he wrote a short article in Le Journal des Sçavans describing the machine.

Grillet was inspired by Blaise Pascal's work with calculating machines to combine the Pascaline with Napier's bones, and build a machine that could perform both addition and multiplication. He displayed his machine at fairs in France and the Netherlands between 1673 and 1681. He tried to establish a business of manufacturing and selling calculating machines, with unclear success.

In addition to the calculating machine, Grillet invented a hygrometer (for which he was accused of plagiarism by another inventor), graphometers, a drawing instrument set, and a protractor and set square with plumb-bob. In 1690, the first textile-printing factory in England was established by a Frenchman of the same name, who took out a patent on the process.

Le Journal des Sçavans
Designer of a mechanical calculating machine in the 17th century
Date of Birth
1700

Contact Us

  • Contact: Aaron C. Sylvan,
    Board Chair
  • Address: IT History Society
    534 Third Avenue
    Suite 1248
    Brooklyn, NY 11215
  • Email:      info@ithistory.org