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Some Biogeographers, Evolutionists and Ecologists:
Chrono-Biographical Sketches
Kirby, William (England 1759-1850)
entomology
from Wikipedia.org |
William Kirby's long and happy life as a humble rural
clergyman was in part enriched by his interest in nature--especially,
in another humble element of God's Creation, the insects. He in fact became
a leading entomologist of his time, giving his attention to the description
of both local (e.g., his 1802 work on bees) and foreign forms
(e.g., his volume on the specimens collected by Richardson in
North America, for the latter's Fauna Boreali-Americana), and
to insects in general (his Introduction to Entomology became
the standard source on this subject). Kirby had a worldwide reputation
and corresponded with all the leading figures in entomology of his era. |
Life Chronology
--born in Witnesham, Suffolk, England, on 18 September
1759.
--1781: B.A., Caius College, Cambridge
--1782: takes holy orders
--1788: charter fellow of the Linnean Society of London
--1797-1850: Vicar of Barham, Suffolk
--1802: publishes his Monographia apum Angliæ
--1815: M.A., Caius College, Cambridge
--1815-1826: publishes his Introduction to Entomology, with W.
Spence
--1818: elected to the Royal Society
--1835: contributes a two-volume monograph on insects to the Bridgewater
Treatises series
--1837: honorary president, Entomological Society of London
--1837: publishes his The Insects, fourth and final part of Sir
John Richardson's Fauna Boreali-Americana
--dies at Barham, Suffolk, England, on 4 July 1850.
For Additional
Information, See:
--Oxford Dictionary of National Biography,
Vol. 31 (2004).
--Proceedings of the Linnean Society of London, Vol. 2 (1848-55):
133-135.
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Copyright 2005 by Charles H. Smith. All rights
reserved.
http://www.wku.edu/~smithch/chronob/KIRB1759.htm
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