Pierre Amable Jean-Baptiste Trannoy (Amiens, Somme, 22 November 1772 â Amiens, 26 March 1831) was a French medical doctor, hygienist and botanist.
Son of Jean-Baptiste Martin Trannoy and Marie-Catherine Julie Chopin he was first surgeon-major of a battalion of "" in his home town, then second surgeon at the Hôtel-Dieu d'Amiens on the Chaussée Saint-Leu.
In 1795, he went to Paris to attend medical courses at the Sorbonne.
In 1798, he was appointed curator and director of the Botanical Garden of Amiens and professor of natural history at the Central School of the Somme department a chair he held until this school was abolished in 1802.
In 1801, he submitted a medical thesis to the Faculty of Medicine in Paris, entitled: Sur le pronostic des affections sympathiques de l'à Âil dans les maladies aiguës (On the prognosis of sympathetic eye diseases in acute illnesses).
In 1807 and 1808, he was professor of anatomy, physiology, medical subjects and hygiene at the civil hospices in Amiens.
In 1815, he was appointed doctor of epidemics for the districts of Amiens and Dourlens (now Doullens).
In 1819, he wrote an Traité élémentaire des maladies épidémiques ou populaires àl'usage des officiers de santé (Elementary Treatise on Epidemic or Popular Diseases for the use of health officers).
Trannoy is the author of a dissertation in response to these questions posed by the "Académie des sciences, belles-lettres et arts de Rouen" (Academy of Sciences, belles-lettres and arts of Rouen) put out to tender in 1822:
Joseph-Marie Quérard also notes that: