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  2. Pierre-Simon Girard (4 November 1765 – 30 November 1836) was a French mathematician and engineer, who worked on fluid mechanics. Girard was born in Caen. A prodigy who invented a water turbine at the age of ten, he worked as an engineer at the École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées.

  3. Pierre-Simon Girard was a French mathematician and engineer. He published works on fluid flow. View two larger pictures. Biography. Pierre-Simon Girard's father, Pierre Girard, was a goldsmith and watchmaker who was a strict Calvinist.

  4. Pierre-Simon Girard. French inventor who, in 1775, invented the first water turbine. This device was the first to harness the power of water using a turbine instead of a water wheel. Although not significantly more efficient at the time than water wheels of the day, the turbine proved much more versatile over time.

  5. Pierre-Simon Girard, a renowned French engineer, made significant contributions to the fields of hydraulic engineering and water management. Born on November 4, 1765, in Caen, France, Girard's early education laid the foundation for his successful career.

  6. Pierre-Simon Girard (4 November 1765 – 30 November 1836) was a French mathematician and engineer, who worked on fluid mechanics.

  7. He was Bishop of Lodeve and then Bishop of Le Puy. He was a cardinal of the Avignon Obedience during the Great Western Schism, and was promoted to the Bishopric of Tusculum (Frascati). His principal work, however, was as a courtier and administrator at Avignon, and as a papal diplomat.

  8. Oct 20, 2017 · Girard was both a thinker whose work impinged on disciplines in the social sciences and an apologist for Christianity. Instead of keeping these two aspects separate, as academic decorum would have prescribed, he brought them together, arguing that his Christian...

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