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Johann Baptist von Spix : ウィキペディア英語版 | Johann Baptist von Spix
Johann Baptist Ritter von Spix (9 February 1781 – 13 March 1826) was a German biologist. From his expedition to Brazil he brought to Germany a large variety of specimens of plants, insects, mammals, birds, amphibians and fish. They constitute an important basis for today's National Zoological Collection in Munich. Numerous examples of his ethnographic collections, such as dance masks and the like, are now part of the collection of the Museum of Ethnography in Munich. ==Biography== Spix was born in Höchstadt, in present-day Middle Franconia, as the seventh of eleven children. His childhood home is the site of the Spix Museum, open to the public since 2004. He studied philosophy in Bamberg and graduated with a doctoral degree. Later he studied theology in Würzburg. After lectural speeches of the young professor F. W. J. Schelling, he became interested in nature. He quit his theology studies and began studying medicine, which he finished with a second doctoral degree in 1807. After a short time working as medics in Bamberg, he was appointed by king Maximilian I. Joseph from Bavaria as student of zoology ("Eleve") in Munich at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Munich in 1808. He received a scolarship to go to Paris to learn scientific zoology with Georges Cuvier and others. From there he also made a first excursion to the sea coast of Normandy in Northern France. Later he travelled to Southern France and Italy, collecting animals for the zoological collection of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities and investigating marine animals. In 1810 Spix came back to Munich where he sorted the zoological collection and published a first publication on starfish and other marine animals. After his first fundamental publication, a book about the history of zoological classification published in 1811, he was appointed member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences. Spix was also appointed the first conservator, now inline with the title director, of the Bavarian zoological collection, considered as the foundation of the Zoologische Staatssammlung München. He published several further works, being the most important a comparative morphology of the skulls of many different animals, including men, apes, reptiles, birds and others. This book, the ''Cephalogenesis,'' published in 1815, was written in Latin and illustrated with beautiful lithographies.
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