Jean-Nicolas Boulay
Jean-Nicolas Boulay (11 June 1837 in Vagney – 19 October 1905 in Lille) was a French clergyman, bryologist and paleobotanist.
He studied theology at the seminary in Saint-Dié-des-Vosges, later being named professor of botany at the Catholic University of Lille (1875). The Jardin botanique Nicolas Boulay at the university is named in his honor.
He was the author of numerous books and articles in the fields of bryology and paleobotany. The fossil pteridosperm genus Boulayatheca bears his name, as does the bryophyte genus Boulaya, being circumscribed by Jules Cardot in 1912. In addition to bryological/paleobotanioal research, he performed taxonomic work involving the genus Rubus. In 1873 Boulay founded the Association rubologique. This organisation for plant exchange distributed the exsiccatae Association rubologique (Rubi exsiccati) among its members with a delivery each year until its dissolution in 1893. With Maurice Bouly de Lesdain he distributed the exsiccata Rubi praesertim Galliae exsiccati.