Jean-François-Marie de Surville was a merchant captain with the French East India Company. He fought in the War of the Austrian Succession and the Seven Years’ War, twice becoming a prisoner of war. In 1769, in command of Saint Jean-Baptiste, he sailed from India on an expedition to the Pacific looking for trading opportunities. De Surville drowned off the coast of Peru on 8 April 1770 while seeking help for his scurvy-afflicted crew.
About Jean-François-Marie de Surville in brief

He had a son, Jean-Francois-Marie, who was also a ship captain and served in the French Navy during the Seven years’ War. He also had a daughter, Marie-Louise, who became the first woman to serve as a captain of a French warship in the First World War. Surville died in 1801 and is survived by his wife, Marie, and two children, Marie and Jean-Pierre. He leaves behind a son and two daughters, all of whom were born in France, and a daughter-in-law, Marie-Anne, who died in Paris in 1834. He left behind a wife and two sons. He never married and died in France in 1881. He survived by leaving behind a daughter and three sons, Jean-Philippe, who served as a French naval officer in the Second World War and later became a French ambassador to the United States. In his last years of life, he lived on Réunion with his wife and had several children. He wrote a book about his experiences, The Voyage of Jean Jean-Jean-B Baptiste: A Voyage in the South Pacific, published in 1769–70, and was awarded the Cross of Saint Louis by the French government in 1781. In the same year, he also wrote a biography of James Cook, who had preceded him on the Pacific voyage.
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This page is based on the article Jean-François-Marie de Surville published in Wikipedia (as of Oct. 31, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






