Franz Josef Ruprecht
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Franz Josef Ruprecht | |
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Born | |
Died | 4 April 1870 Saint Petersburg | (aged 55)
Franz Josef Ruprecht (1 November 1814 – 4 April 1870) was an Austrian-born physician and botanist active in the Russian Empire, where he was known as Frants Ivanovič Ruprekht (Template:Lang-ru).
He was born in Freiburg im Breisgau, and grew up in Prague, where he studied, and graduated as Doctor of Medicine in 1836. After a short stint in medical practice in Prague, he was appointed curator of the herbarium of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Saint Petersburg in 1839, then assistant director of the Saint Petersburg Botanical Garden between 1851 and 1855, and professor of botany in 1855 at the University of Saint Petersburg.[1] He died in Saint Petersburg in 1870.
He described many new plants collected in the Russian Far East, including Alaska, then under Russian rule; examples include Adiantum aleuticum, Lonicera maackii, and Phellodendron amurense.
The genus Ruprechtia is named after him.[2]
Publications
- Ruprecht, F. J. Symbolae ad historiam et geographiam plantarum Rossicarum, St. Petersburg in 1846
- Ruprecht, F. J. Flora Caucasi, P. 1. St. Pétersbourg 1869
- Postels, A., Ruprecht, F.J. Illustrationes algarum, Weinheim, J. Cramer 1963
- Ruprecht, F. J. Flora ingrica (flora of the Leningrad region).
References
- ^ Darwin Correspondence: Franz Josef Ruprecht
- ^ Huxley, A., ed. (1992). New RHS Dictionary of Gardening. Macmillan ISBN 0-333-47494-5.
- ^ International Plant Names Index. Rupr.
- Extensive biography on Allg. Deutsche Biographie [1]
- Fedotova A.A. The Origins of the Russian Chernozem Soil (Black Earth): Franz Joseph Ruprecht’s ‘Geo-Botanical Researches into the Chernozem’ of 1866]], Environment and History, 16 (2010): 271–293
- 1814 births
- 1870 deaths
- 19th-century Russian people
- 19th-century Austrian people
- Imperial Austrian emigrants to the Russian Empire
- 19th-century botanists
- Imperial Russian botanists
- Austrian botanists
- Demidov Prize laureates
- Full Members of the St Petersburg Academy of Sciences
- Russian people of German descent
- German Bohemian people
- Scientists from Prague
- People from Freiburg im Breisgau
- Saint Petersburg State University faculty
- European botanist stubs
- Austrian scientist stubs
- Russian scientist stubs