This project will explore the network which developed around Hinrich Lichtenstein – the University of Berlin’s first Chair of Zoology and director of its research-orientated Museum of Zoology from 1815 until his death in 1857 – in his attempts to fill the museum with as many specimens of different animal species as possible. Of particular interest will be the extension of this network to the Cape Colony, whence Lichtenstein acquired a not insignificant portion of the museum’s materials through the efforts of both the young, German salaried naturalists he employed to collect there as well as the independent commercial traders, such as the Hanoverian traveller Ludwig Krebs, who would ultimately become the museum's most reliable suppliers in t...
This article gives an overview of the very early collections of Māori artefacts in Berlin. These enc...
The sheer variety and size of Dutch scientific collections of Indonesia’s flora and fauna are unique...
I explore three different themes in the history of science through the lens of the museum: 1) scienc...
When Hinrich Lichtenstein arrived in Cape Town in December 1802, he just had received his university...
UID/HIS/04209/2013 SFRH/BPD/108236/2015This paper addresses a nineteenth century African manuscript ...
During his expedition to the rivers Rio Negro and Japurá between 1903 and 1905, the German ethnologi...
German-speaking naturalists working in southeastern Australia in the mid-19th century relied heavily...
This case study appears in: Mays C, Laborie L, Griset P (eds) (2022) Inventing a shared science dipl...
Between 1862 and 1881, the director of the Zoological Section of the Museu Nacional de Lisboa, José ...
Friedrich Welwitsch’s 19th-century publication on ethnobotany: Synopse Explicativa das Amostras de M...
Explores the intertwined relationship between science, gender and settler colonialism in the ninetee...
This thesis investigates the geography in and of Victorian scientific practice by examining the Zamb...
Global History of Science Seminar (GHOSS)The zoological garden is a child of the nineteenth century....
At the beginning of the 21st century, knowledge systems about nature face severe challenges. While s...
Before World War I, there were significant transnational movements and interactions between colonie...
This article gives an overview of the very early collections of Māori artefacts in Berlin. These enc...
The sheer variety and size of Dutch scientific collections of Indonesia’s flora and fauna are unique...
I explore three different themes in the history of science through the lens of the museum: 1) scienc...
When Hinrich Lichtenstein arrived in Cape Town in December 1802, he just had received his university...
UID/HIS/04209/2013 SFRH/BPD/108236/2015This paper addresses a nineteenth century African manuscript ...
During his expedition to the rivers Rio Negro and Japurá between 1903 and 1905, the German ethnologi...
German-speaking naturalists working in southeastern Australia in the mid-19th century relied heavily...
This case study appears in: Mays C, Laborie L, Griset P (eds) (2022) Inventing a shared science dipl...
Between 1862 and 1881, the director of the Zoological Section of the Museu Nacional de Lisboa, José ...
Friedrich Welwitsch’s 19th-century publication on ethnobotany: Synopse Explicativa das Amostras de M...
Explores the intertwined relationship between science, gender and settler colonialism in the ninetee...
This thesis investigates the geography in and of Victorian scientific practice by examining the Zamb...
Global History of Science Seminar (GHOSS)The zoological garden is a child of the nineteenth century....
At the beginning of the 21st century, knowledge systems about nature face severe challenges. While s...
Before World War I, there were significant transnational movements and interactions between colonie...
This article gives an overview of the very early collections of Māori artefacts in Berlin. These enc...
The sheer variety and size of Dutch scientific collections of Indonesia’s flora and fauna are unique...
I explore three different themes in the history of science through the lens of the museum: 1) scienc...