Bernard Altum
Johann Bernard Theodor Altum (31 January 1824, Münster, Province of Westphalia – 1 February 1900, Eberswalde) was a German Catholic priest, zoologist, and forest scientist.
Background
He studied philosophy and theology in Münster, and was ordained as a priest in 1849. Later, his interests turned to zoology, a discipline that he studied under Johannes Peter Müller and Martin Lichtenstein in Berlin. From 1859 he was a lecturer at the University of Münster, then relocated in 1869 to the Academy of Forestry in Eberswalde as a successor to Julius Theodor Christian Ratzeburg.
In his earlier work, his research primarily dealt with mammals and birds; after moving to Eberswalde, his studies were largely in the field of forest entomology.[1]
From 1893 to 1900 he was president of the German Ornithologists' Society.
Works
- Homeri cum Aeschyli, Sophoclis, Euripidis comparantur, (dissertation), Berlin 1855.
- Winke zur Hebung des zoologischen Unterrichts (a zoology instruction manual), Münster 1863.
- Die Säugetiere des Münsterlands, Münster (Mammals of "Münster country"), 1867.
- Der Vogel und sein Leben, Münster 1868 (Birds and their lives); published in several editions, 7th edition 1903.
- Forstzoologie (Forest zoology; volume 1: mammals, volume 2: birds, volume 3: insects; general insects and beetles).
- I. Säugethiere. Second improved and enlarged edition, published by Julius Springer, Berlin 1876.
- II. Vögel. published by Julius Springer, Berlin 1873.
- III. Insecten. 1. Abth. Allgemeines und Käfer. Second improved and enlarged edition, published by Julius Springer, Berlin 1881.[2]
References
- ↑ NDB/ADB Deutsche Biographie Archived January 5, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. (translated biography)
- ↑ Deutsche Wikisource (bibliography)