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Jean-Nicolas Gannal was succeeded in his embalming business by a son and a grandson. In 1903, their company embalmed the body of Elie Faure, the famous historian of art. According to the company's records, the Gannal process was used to embalm the bodies of Hortense Schneider, Anna de Noailles, Paul Doumer, maréchal Joffre and many other ...
Immediately prior to the American Civil War, Holmes experimented with arterial embalming based on the earlier work of Jean-Nicolas Gannal of Paris. Through this experimentation, he developed an arterial solution, which went on to be manufactured commercially and was sold for $3.00 per1-US-gallon (3.8 L), and injection apparatus.
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Orléans, Gatineau, 1851) had been written on the words of the Orléans historian and bibliophile Jean Michel Constant Leber. Demar was born in Gernsbach (Duchy of Baden ) 30 October 1786. Her death certificate indicates that she was the daughter of "Jacob-Ignace-Sébastien Demar, music teacher, and of Dame Elisabeth Riesam". [ 10 ]
July 27 – Jean-Nicolas Gannal, French pharmacist, chemist and inventor (died 1852) September 4 – Robert Knox, Scottish anatomist (died 1862) September 22 – Michael Faraday, English chemist and physicist (died 1867) September 23 – Johann Franz Encke, German astronomer (died 1865)
Jean-Nicolas Gannal; Charles Garnier (architect) Henry Gauthier-Villars; Francisque Gay; François Gérard; Georges Gillet; Léon Ginain; Catherine Grand;
In 2021, Jean’s husband of nearly 34 years, Richard Gilliland, died suddenly from a heart condition. The couple share two sons, Connor and Forrest, and they made her want to consider her health ...
Of the aesthetic preparations prior to embalming, the closure of the eyes, mouth, and lips are the most aesthetically obvious. There is a distinction between mouth closure and lip closure, the former meaning closure of the jaws, whilst the latter is closure of the lips and ‘setting’ the look of the mouth.