Auguste Desgodins

Auguste Desgodins

Auguste Desgodins (16 October 1826, Manheulles – 14 March 1913, Pedong) was a French missionary who attempted to enter into Tibet in the early 1860s.[1] While both Desgodins and his colleague, the Vicar Apostolic Thomine-Desmazures were granted passports to enter Lhasa, Tibet in 1861 and 1862, they were repelled from the border on multiple occasions.[2] He lived sometime in Darjeeling.

Desgodins published an essay of Tibetan grammar and was a key architect of the development of Tibetan-Latin dictionary French, which was published in 1899.[3]

Along with Felix Biet, he founded in 1865 the Catholic Church of Yerkalo. Auguste Desgodins collected butterflies for Charles Oberthur.

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