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The Spanish-American Works of Alexander von Humboldt as Viewed By Leading British Periodicals, 1800–1830

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2015

Calvin P. Jones*
Affiliation:
Pikeville CollegePikeville, Kentucky

Extract

Perhaps the most significant scientific works published about Spanish-America during the entire era 1800–1830 were the botanical and zoological findings of the German scientist, Alexander von Humboldt. He had traveled in the Spanish colonies from 1799 to 1804. Humboldt has been acclaimed as the greatest naturalist that the world had seen since Aristotle and as the foremost man in Europe during his lifetime with the exception of Napoleon. He had taken a scientific education in several German universities and had once held an appointment in Berlin as a mining official for the Prussian government. On his way back to Europe in 1804 at the conclusion of his scientific survey in Spanish-America, he stopped in the United States to visit President Thomas Jefferson who asked him to fix the new boundaries of the United States following the purchase of Louisiana. This side trip probably saved Humboldt’s life because the ship which sailed from South America with his specimens was lost at sea.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Academy of American Franciscan History 1973

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References

1 Hubbard, Elbert, Little Journeys to Homes of Great Scientists: Humboldt (New York: The Roycrofters, 1905), 105107 Google Scholar; Edward Rommel Brann, Alexander Von Humboldt: Patron of Science (Madison, Wisconsin: Little Printing Company, 1954), 25 Google Scholar.

2 Hubbard, 105–107.

3 Terra, Helmut de, Humboldt: The Life and Times of Alexander Von Humboldt, 1769–1859 (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1955), 181 Google Scholar.

4 Hubbard, 116–118.

5 One was a description of the province of Quito, part of the correspondence is found in the “Annals of the National Museum of Natural History …” (Of Paris), Monthly Review, XLVII (August, 1805), 478490 Google Scholar.

6 Reviews of “Plantes Equinoxiales …,” Ibid., XLVIII (December, 1805), 528529 Google Scholar and “Observations on Zoology and Comparative Anatomy …,” Ibid., 530531 Google Scholar. Both reviews were complimentary to the author and pointed out that he also gave credit to his travelling companion, Bonpland, for his findings although he had done the writings himself. The two naturalists were congratulated for having added considerably to the body of knowledge by virtue of their significant findings.

7 The Royal Irish Academy and the Royal Society of London were interested in nautical observations and measurements made by Don Joseph Rodriguez and Joseph Mendoza Rios. See reviews of “Transactions …,” “Philosophical Transactions …,” Ibid., LXXIII (March, 1814), 9495 Google Scholar, and “A Complete Collection of Tables …,” Ibid., LXIV (January, 1811), 9495 Google Scholar.

8 Various plants were recommended for transplantation to the British West Indian possessions. See a review of Sketches towards a Hortus Botanicus Americanus …,” Ibid., LXVIII (May, 1812), 9697 Google Scholar. They were described with names arranged from the Linnean System. See Ibid., LXXII (November, 1813), 328. “The Transactions of the Horticultural Society of London …” included a work by Sir Joseph Banks which recommended the grafting of the Spanish chestnut in order to produce nuts which, although smaller than the imported fruit, were “beyond comparison sweeter.” See Ibid., LX (November, 1809), 266276 Google Scholar.

9 A review of “Tableaux de la Nature, etc. …,” Monthly Review, LIX (August, 1809), 473483 Google Scholar.

10 Ibid., LVI (December, 1811), 353–365; Ibid., LXVII (January, 1812), 35–43; Ibid., LXIX (September, 1812), 35–54; Edinburgh Review, XVI (April, 1810), 62–102; and Ibid., XIX (December, 1811), 164–198.

11 Edinburgh Review, XVI (June, 1810), 223252 Google Scholar.

12 Humboldt himself stressed the plant life of the area as well as different types of animal life, in particular, the eel. For excerpts concerned with Humboldt’s discussion of the “Electrical Eels” in South America, see “Natural History,” Annual Register for the Year 1809, LI (1811), 851–852. For an article entitled “Eaters of Earth” among the Indian tribes see Ibid., 845. There was also a lengthy article about the trip taken by Humboldt and Bonpland which went into great detail. See “Account of Books for 1809,” Ibid., 924–935.

13 Quarterly Review, XIV (December, 1815), 368402 Google Scholar.

14 Reviews of “Researches concerning the Institutions and Monuments of the ancient Inhabitants of America …,” Monthly Review, 2d ser., LXXIX (January, 1816), 1621 Google Scholar, and Quarterly Review, XV (July, 1816), 440–468; plus reviews of “Personal Narrative of Travels to the Equinoctial Regions …,” Monthly Review, 2d ser., LXXIX (January, 1816), 1–16; Quarterly Review, XVIII (October, 1817), 135–158; and Ibid., XXI (March, 1819), 320–352; Monthly Review, 2d ser., LXXXVIII (March, 1819), 234–246; Ibid., XC (September, 1819), 14–24; and New Monthly Magazine, II (1821), 314–318. Excerpts from Humboldt’s Travels concerned with “Earthquake in the Caraccas” and “Scenery on the Rio Apure” also appeared in “Natural History,” Annual Register for the Year 1819, LXI (1820), 551–556.

15 Monthly Review, 2d ser., LXXXVIII (March, 1819), 234–246.

16 Ibid., XC (September, 1819), 1424 Google Scholar.

17 Quarterly Review, XXV (June, 1821), 365392 Google Scholar.

18 New Monthly Magazine, II (1821), 314318 Google Scholar.

19 Reviews of “Personal Narrative of Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of the New Continent, during the years 1799–1804 …,” Monthly Review, 2d ser., C (March, 1823), 264281 Google Scholar; Ibid., CVIII (October, 1825), 215–224; “Critical Notices,” New Monthly Magazine, XVIII (May 1, 1826), 184185 Google Scholar; “Synopsis Plantaram quas, in Itinere ad Plagam Aequinoctialem Orbis Novi …,” Monthly Review, 2d ser., CIII (April, 1824), 493495 Google Scholar; and “A eGognostical Essay on the Superposition of Rocks, in both Hemispheres …,” Ibid., CV (November, 1824), 225237 Google Scholar.

20 “Foreign Varieties: America,” New Monthly Magazine, XV (September 1, 1825), 405 Google Scholar, and Ibid., XVIII (July 1, 1826), 293–294.

21 Selections from the Works of Baron de Humboldt relating to the climate, Inhabitants, Productions, and Mines of Mexico with notes by John Taylor (London: 1824), preface.

22 “Foreign Varieties: America,” New Monthly Magazine, III (October 1, 1824), 447448 Google Scholar.

23 Ibid., XV (September 1, 1825), 403–404.

24 Monthly Review, 3d ser., XI (June, 1829), 200214 Google Scholar.

25 “Miscellaneous Notices,” Mechanics’ Magazine, XII, No. 320 (Saturday, September 26, 1829), 94 Google Scholar.

26 “Literary and Miscellaneous Intelligence: Foreign and Domestic,” Monthly Review, 3d ser., VII (March, 1828), 413 Google Scholar.

27 “Miscellaneous Intelligence,” Ibid., XIV (May, 1830), 154 Google Scholar.

28 New Monthly Magazine, XXIII (1828), 4553 Google Scholar; “Critical Notices,” Ibid., XXVII (September 1, 1829), 386387 Google Scholar; Monthly Review, 3d ser., VIII (July, 1828), 314328 Google Scholar; Westminister Review, IX (April, 1828), 480500 Google Scholar.