- Wilhelm Hemprich
Wilhelm Friedrich Hemprich (
June 24 ,1796 -June 30 ,1825 ) was a German naturalist and explorer.Hemprich was born in Glatz (Kłodzko),
Prussian Silesia , and studied medicine atBreslau andBerlin . It was in Berlin that he became friends withChristian Gottfried Ehrenberg , the two men sharing an interest in natural history.Hemprich lectured atBerlin University on comparative physiology, and wrote "Grundiss der Naturgeschichte" (The Rudiments of Natural History) (1820). In his spare time he studiedreptile s andamphibian s at the zoological museum underHinrich Lichtenstein .In 1820 Hemprich and Ehrenberg were invited to serve as naturalists on a primarily archeological expedition to
Egypt , led by Prussian General von Minutoli. The two naturalists were sponsored by the Berlin Academy. In March 1821 they separated from the main party and travelled up the riverNile to Dongola, the capital ofNubia . They spent the next two years studying the natural history of that part of Egypt.In 1823 Hemprich and Ehrenberg sailed across the
Gulf of Suez to El Sur on the south-west coast of the Sinai peninsula, remaining there for nine months. During this time they visitedMount Sinai , and Ehrenberg became one of the first naturalists to study the marine life of theRed Sea . In 1824 they visited theLebanon , travelling inland fromBeirut to the summit of the Jebel Liban and making their base at Bcharre. In August they returned to Egypt.In November they set off again along the coasts of the Red Sea, calling at various ports including
Jidda . They eventually arrived in theEritrea n port ofMassawa , their intention being to visit the highlands of Abyssinia. Unfortunately Hemprich died in Massawa of fever, and Ehrenberg buried him on the island of Toalul. Ehrenberg travelled back to Europe, and in 1828 published an account of their discoveries, under both their names, entitled "Symbolae Physicae". The specimens collected by the expedition were deposited at the Berlin Museum: they included 46,000 botanical specimens of 3000 species and 34,000 animal specimens of 4000 species. These included many new species.Hemprich is commemorated in the names of the
Sooty Gull , "Larus hemprichii" theHemprich's Hornbill "Tockus hemprichii" and the fossil amber pseudoscorpion "Pseudogarypus hemprichii"References
*Barbara and Richard Mearns - "Biographies for Birdwatchers" ISBN 0-12-487422-3
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