Jérôme Eugène Coggia
| 96 Aegle | 17 February 1868 | Template:MPC |
| 187 Lamberta | 11 April 1878 | Template:MPC |
| 193 Ambrosia | 28 February 1879 | Template:MPC |
| 217 Eudora | 30 August 1880 | Template:MPC |
| 444 Gyptis | 31 March 1899 | Template:MPC |
Jérôme Eugène Coggia (18 February 1849 – 15 January 1919) was a 19th-century French astronomer and discoverer of asteroids and comets, who was born in the Corsican town of Ajaccio.<ref name="obituary" />
Working at the Marseille Observatory from 1866 to 1917, Coggia discovered a number of comets, including the bright "Coggia's Comet" (C/1874 H1). The periodic comet 27P/Crommelin was previously called "Comet Pons-Coggia-Winnecke-Forbes". He is also credited by the Minor Planet Center with the discovery of 5 asteroids at Marseille between 1868 and 1899.<ref name="MPC-Discoverers" />
Coggia was awarded by the French Academy of Sciences its Lalande Prize for 1873<ref name="Prix-Lalande" /> and again for 1916.<ref name="Prix-Lalande-2" /><ref>The Observatory, Vol. 41 (1918), p. 142. (online)</ref>
Comets discovered or co-discovered
- C/1870 Q1 (Coggia)<ref name=Comets />
- 27P/Crommelin
- C/1874 H1 (Coggia)<ref name=Comets />
- C/1874 Q1 (Coggia)<ref name=Comets />
- C/1877 R1 (Coggia)<ref name=Comets />
- C/1890 O1 (Coggia)<ref name=Comets /><ref>Award of the DONOHOE Comet-Medal, Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, vol. 2, no. 11, p. 292, 1890 The Donohoe Comet Medal was awarded to Coggia for his July 18, 1890 discovery.</ref>