Archibald Higgins is the main character of the scientific comics series of "The Adventures of Archibald Higgins", created by the FrenchastrophysicistJean-Pierre Petit as a translation of his French series "Les Aventures d'Anselme Lanturlu" first created in 1980. The series was initially published by Editions Belin. Curious and candid, Archibald's adventures are a pretext for the popularization of science in fields ranging from physics to computer science, helped in this by the charming Sophie who guides him in his efforts while letting him search, as well as by three very learned animals: Leon the pelican, Max the bird and Tiresias the snail. The albums are filled with encounters with characters from well-known scientists from different periods. This series is the first example in the history of real science education through comics. It is not a comic strip that would take place in the scientific community: the objective is to acquire scientific knowledge. It was born from many drawings that the author had to create in order to teach physical sciences and geometry to philosophy students at the Faculty of Aix-en-Provence. The scientific level of the target readership is very diverse: some albums can be understood by high school students, most by science graduates, some require a first university level in mathematics. This science comics series explains mainly highly advanced scientific concepts : cosmology, general relativity, topology, anatomy, MHD, fluid mechanics, astrophysics, geometry, economy, aeronautics... Since 2005, the association Savoir sans Frontieres organises the professional translation and the free download of all the albums as webcomics in PDF format.
Dissemination of the series
Editions Belin has published fourteen hard cover albums. Four others rejected by Belin were published by Editions Présence. From 1980 onwards, the series was marketed in several languages:
in Russian: приключения Ансельмa Ансельмa Лантюрлю,
in Polish: Przygody Anzelma Roztropka,
in esperanto: La aventuroj de Anselmo Lanturlup published by Monda Asembleo Socia,
but also in Japanese, and Persian.
Since 2005 Jean-Pierre Petit drawn others Archibald webcomics. Archibald appears now in up to 28 albums. The full series of Archibald albums is distributed free of charge since 2005 on the website of the association Savoir Sans Frontières, which has set itself the goal, among other things, of professionally translating these albums into as many languages as possible. Archibald series thus joins the webcomics movement, and by the way of translations financed by crowdsourcing, it added another innovation in this field. As of November 2018, a total of 536 albums, books, videos other original productions were available in 39 languages, with the website regularly adding new translations. The languages that know the most albums downloaded from the association's website are: French, Spanish, German, English, Italian. By way of comparison, the Lucky Luke and Corto Maltese series are translated into some twenty languages, and the most widely distributed Asterix and Tintin series are translated into more than a hundred. In 2011, Editions Astropress published a new edition compiling most of the albums in several languages. Each language is the subject of 3 volumes, each volume comprising more than 600 pages:
The Scientific Comics of Jean-Pierre Petit
Die Wissenschaftlichen Comics von Jean-Pierre Petit
Le Bande Designate Scientifici Di Jean-Pierre Petit
A few albums are an opportunity for Jean-Pierre Petit to present in some pages his own scientific results that have previously been the subject of scientific peer-reviewed publications or other books. This is the case with:
The silence barrier
Faster than light
The Twin Universe
The Topologicon
The Chronologicon
The Logotron
The Adventures of Archibald Higgins (hard cover edition)
of the albums of Archibald and the association Savoir sans Frontières by the Mathematics Department of the University of Rome
Positive appreciation of the albumThe Black Hole in the Polish scientific journal
Vincent Borrelli, lecturer, led a conference on 21 October 2013, organised by the mathematics pole of INSA Lyon, entitled: The album Le Géométricon is cited as a reference.
Three Archibald albums are referenced by Michèle Porte in her book , hors collection des Cahiers de Fontenay, ENS editions, seminars 1986-87-December 88, Fontenay/Saint-Cloud
The Geometricon is referenced by Thomas Hausberger, Manuel Bächtold, in: , Publication of the IREM de Montpellier - production of the Mathematics and Philosophy group, 2015.
The page , of the mathematics department of the University of Toulouse, cites the Archibald series; these albums are also quickly commented on this dedicated to mathematics education.
Archibald and the media
First TV interview on Archibald
Presentation of the association Savoir sans Frontieres during an on France Inter
published on the website of the Bulgarian network , 17.03.2009
Presentation of the album "The black hole" by Jean-Pierre Petit in the show Temps X on January 2, 1982
The association Savoir sans Frontieres is mentioned in an by La Voix de la Russie, 2014/02
The association Savoir sans Frontieres is mentioned in an published by Les Inrockuptibles, 2012/09