- Belsazar Hacquet
Belsazar de la Motte Hacquet, (also Balthasar or Balthazar Hacquet) (
1739 -January 10 ,1815 ) was an Austrian physician and scientist who was born inLe Conquet , France. He studied inVienna , and was asurgeon during theSeven Years' War . Later he was an instructor ofanatomy andnatural sciences inLaibach (nowLjubljana ), and in 1788 was a professor at theUniversity of Lemberg . After 1810 he lived in Vienna.Hacquet is remembered for his scientific journeys throughout the
Austrian Empire . He was apolymath , and performed research in the fields ofgeology ,mineralogy ,botany ,chemistry ,ethnography ,petrology andkarstology . He is recognized as the first scientist to perform extensive exploration of theJulian Alps . In 1777 he was the first to try to ascend to the top ofTriglav (2864 m), the highest peak in Slovenia, and reachedMali Triglav (2725 m).Among his written works is the four-volume "
Oryctographia Carniolica ", which included a geological and mineralogical study ofCarniola ,Istria , and surrounding districts. This work also included an in-depth report of the mercury mine atIdrija . He also wrote an ethnographical study of Southern Slavic peoples in a treatise called "Slavus Venedus Illyricus".As a botanist Hacquet wrote a book on
alpine flora from Carniola called "Plantae alpinae Carniolicae ". The botanical genus "Hacquetia " is named after him, as well as the plant species "Pedicularis hacquetii " (Hacquet'slousewort ). On one of his excursions, he discovered "on the evening, Trenta side of Triglav, a new species of scabious" and picked it for hisherbarium collection, nowadays preserved in theNatural History Museum of Slovenia . He called the species "Scabiosa trenta " in the published description, and drew it. Many botanists have sought the mysterious pale yellowscabious , among them also the youngJulius Kugy . He searched for the secretive flower, and though he was not able to find it, this led him to became a great explorer and describer of the Julian Alps. The Austrian botanist,A. Kerner , later proved Belsazar Hacquet had not found a new species, but a specimen of the already known submeditteranean "Cephalaria leucantha ".References
* [http://www.zrc-sazu.si/izrk/Carsologica/Acta322/hacquet.htm International Conference on the Life and Work of Balthasar Hacquet]
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.