Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Claude Bernard Museum à Saint-Julien dans le Rhône

Musée
Maison des hommes et des femmes célèbres
Musée de médecine et de chirurgie
Rhône

Claude Bernard Museum

    414 Route du musée
    69640 Saint-Julien

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1813
Birth of Claude Bernard
1856
Purchase of house
1865
Major publication
1878
National death and funeral
XXe siècle
Creation of the museum
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Claude Bernard - Physiologist and Founder Owner of the premises, central figure of the museum.
Fanny Martin - Wife of Claude Bernard SPA activist, opposed to his experiments.
Marie-Sarah Raffalovich - Friend and confidant Polyglot, helped disseminate its work.
François Magendie - Scientific Mentor His professor at the Collège de France.
Paul Bert - Disciple and successor Heir of his laboratory and methods.

Origin and history

The Claude Bernard Museum is housed in the bourgeois house that the scholar bought in 1856 in his native village of Saint-Julien, Beaujolais. Born in this commune in 1813, Claude Bernard spent his childhood there before studying in Lyon and then in Paris, where he became a major figure in experimental medicine. This museum traces its life, its scientific discoveries (such as the role of the liver in regulating sugar or the concept of an interior environment), and its intellectual heritage, notably through its research books and its founding publications.

The house, acquired by Bernard to rest on his return home, became a place of memory dedicated to his prolific career after his death in 1878. The museum exhibits personal objects, manuscripts, and scientific instruments related to its work, while evoking its complex family context: its difficult marriage with Fanny Martin, an animal activist, and its relations with disciples such as Paul Bert or Arsène d'Arsonval. The bust of Claude Bernard sits on the central square of Saint-Julien, highlighting the local attachment to this illustrious son.

Among the museum's main pieces are original editions of his works, such as Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine (1865), which influenced authors such as Émile Zola, as well as documents on his scientific controversies, particularly with Pasteur on fermentation. The museum also highlights its role as a philosopher of science, promoter of a rigorous experimental approach, and its prestige distinctions: member of the French Academy, Senator of the Second Empire, and recipient of the Copley Medal.

The building itself, typical of 19th-century bourgeois architecture in Beaujolais, illustrates the contrast between the rural life of Saint-Julien, marked by viticulture ( Bernard's father was a wine merchant), and the Parisian career of the scholar. The harvests, in which Bernard participated during his stays, recall his roots in this region, while contrasting with his revolutionary research conducted in the laboratories of the Collège de France or the Sorbonne.

Finally, the museum addresses the posthumous tributes paid to Claude Bernard, from the streets and hospitals bearing his name (such as the Bichat-Claude-Bernard hospital in Paris) to the educational institutions (Lyon-I University). He also evokes the polemics surrounding his animal experiments, which opposed his wife and animal defenders to his scientific methods, still debated today.

External links

Conditions of visit

  • Conditions de visite : Ouvert toute l'année
  • Contact organisation : 04 74 67 51 44