Claude Duret

Claude Duret (c. 1570–1611) was a French judge, botanist, historiographer and linguist.

He was a son of Louis Duret, personal physician to the French kings Charles IX and Henry III, and the father of Noël Duret, cosmographer to Louis XIII.

He was the author of Histoire Admirable des Plantes (1605), which contained a passage that described falling tree leaves striking water and transforming into fishes and upon land into birds.

[1] Biologist Henry de Varigny wrote that the book "contains evolutionary notions of a very queer sort.

He fully believes that many aquatic birds, as well as many sorts of insects, are generated from the rotten wood of trees.

Illustration from Duret's Histoire Admirable des Plantes (1605)
Thrésor de l'histoire des langues de cest univers https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_u7iC2GQWUI8C