- Mutius von Tommasini
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Muzio Giuseppe Spirito de' Tommasini, sometimes referred to as Muzio Tommasini or as Mutius von Tommasini; (June 4, 1794 – December 31 1879) was a botanist and politician born in Trieste under Austria-Hungary.
He first became interested in botany as a grammar school student in Ljubljana, now part of Slovenia. While studying medicine at the University of Vienna, he was inspired by the work of professor Joseph Franz von Jacquin (1766-1839), and conducted investigations of flora in the vicinity of Vienna. Afterwards, Tommasini studied law at the University of Graz.
A career politician, he received his first appointment in 1817 as an official in the district of Istria. During the following year he was elected district secretary of the city of Split. From 1839 to 1860 he was mayor of Trieste.
As a botanist he participated in several noteworthy expeditions. Early in his career he took exploratory trips to the Biokovo Mountains (1823) and Dalmatia (1827). In 1832 he accompanied Nicolas-Théodore de Saussure (1767-1845) on a botanical excursion through the Austrian Littoral region, and in 1837 with British botanist George Bentham (1800-1884) he performed studies in the regions of Carniola, Carinthia and Friuli.
After his election as mayor in 1839, his botanical trips became less frequent. However in 1840 he journeyed to the Julian Alps, where he scaled Monte Matajur, and soon afterwards collaborated with Otto Sendtner (1813-1859) on an exploratory trip to the coastal areas of Austria, where plants for an herbarium were collected.
Tommasini played an important part in the creation of the Civico Museo di Storia Naturale di Trieste. Also the botanical species Crocus tommasinianus is named in his honor. This plant is commonly referred to as Elfenkrokus (elf crocus) in Germany, and sometimes as "Tommy crocus" in English speaking countries.
References
- This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.
Categories:- Botanists with author abbreviations
- Austrian botanists
- 1794 births
- 1879 deaths
- People from Trieste
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