Peter Artedi

Peter Artedi (February 22, 1705September 27, 1735) was a Swedish naturalist and is known as the "father of Ichthyology". Artedi was born in the province of Angermannia. Intending to become a clergyman, he went, in 1724, to study theology at Uppsala University, but he turned his attention to medicine and natural history, especially fishes. In 1728 his countryman Carolus Linnaeus arrived in Uppsala, and a lasting friendship was formed between the two. In 1732 both left Uppsala, Artedi for England, and Linnaeus for Lapland; before parting they reciprocally bequeathed to each other their manuscripts and books in the event of death. Artedi accidentally drowned at Amsterdam, where he was engaged in cataloguing the collections of Albert Seba, a wealthy Dutchman, who had formed what was perhaps the richest museum of his time. According to agreement, his manuscripts came into the hands of Linnaeus, and his Bibliotheca Ichthyologica and Philosophia Ichthyologica, together with a life of the author, were published at Leiden in 1738. Artedi, Peter Artedi, Peter Artedi, Peter Artedi, Peter Artedi, Peter

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
eygelshoven
gheorghe muresan
shinobi shaw
when in rome
hfr cell
savage garden
kes
israel zangwill
hannah weiner
lake county captains
hamlet (fish)
ruthenian language
science and technology in israel
wensleydale
ruthenian
knights of the maccabees
mikado (game)
british 11th (northern) division
spellicans
jonchets
free soil
baku tbilisi ceyhan pipeline
rus
bisimulation
the quill
remember the titans
list of british cheeses
ernest belfort bax
culture of bosnia and herzegovina
robert blatchford
brazilian logic
edward carpenter
alfred richard orage
the comedy store
beachampton
formal semantics of programming languages
rotary printing press
bellingdon
horezu
david parkinson
imp
trixie
biddlesden
peter i