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Antony Chipault (1866-1920): A Forgotten Pioneer of French Neurosurgery. Antony Chipault (1866-1920) was the first French surgeon to devote his entire professional career to the nervous system. A brilliant scholar, polyglot, and accomplished illustrator, he authored monumental textbooks, including the two-volume Chirurgie opératoire du système nerveux (Operative Surgery of the Nervous System, 1894-1895) and the three-volume collaborative treatise L'État actuel de la chirurgie nerveuse (Current State of Neurological Surgery, 1902), which united contributors from 34 countries. His writings-richly illustrated with his own drawings-emphasized cadaveric validation, meticulous anatomic correlation, statistical analysis, and an international perspective uncommon for his time. Between 1896 and 1902, Chipault published an annual review initially entitled Travaux de neurologie chirurgicale (Surgical Neurology Works), which is recognized as the first recurring periodical dedicated to neurosurgery. Clinically, Chipault was among the first in France to perform craniotomies and spinal procedures and among the earliest worldwide to use radiography to localize intracranial foreign bodies. Yet, despite his vision, he failed to convince many contemporaries of the promise of neurological surgery. Forced into early retirement by illness at the age of 39, he died in obscurity in 1920. This historical vignette revisits his life and work, highlighting Chipault's legacy as a visionary who anticipated neurosurgery as a distinct specialty in France decades before its formal recognition.