Timeline of entomology – prior to 1800

1800-1700 B.C. The Bees of Malia: two golden bees holding a drop of honey

Prehistory

13,000 BC

The earliest evidence of man's interest in insects is from rock paintings. The insects depicted are bees.

1800–1700 BC

Bees were significant in other early civilisations, for instance at Malia, Crete, where jewellery depicts two golden bees holding a drop of honey.

Egypt, Greek and Roman empires

Scarab Beetle painted on wall of Rameses IX tomb c. 1000 BC

Bee-keeping was particularly well developed in Egypt and was discussed by the Roman writers Virgil, Gaius Julius Hyginus, Varro and Columella.

620–560 BC

343 BC (circa]

AD 77–79

847

10th–15th century AD

Carlo Crivelli Madonna

1061

1172

1230-1245

1240

1250

1250(circa)

1258

1350

15th century

Carlo Crivelli draws an association between flies and death in a painting of the Madonna and Child.

16th century

Although the earliest pictorial record of a natural history cabinet is the engraving in Ferrante Imperato's Dell'Historia Naturale (Naples 1599) such collections became more than rudimentary early in this century.

Portrait de Conrad Gessner

1503

1505

1551

1556

1575

1578

17th century

Ulisse Aldrovandi

1602

1630

1634

1646

1653

1654

1655

1662 – (Between 1662 and 1667)

Robert Hooke's microscope

1664 Robert Hooke publishes Micrographia.

1668

1669

1674

1679

1683

1685

1688

1691

Flea drawn by Buonanni (1691).

Observationes circa Viventia, quae in Rebus non Viventibus an important work.

1696

1696 – (from 1696 to 1700)

18th century

René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur.

The development of entomology in the 18th century

In the 18th century three kinds of entomological text appeared. Firstly there were illustrative works – showy insects often beautifully coloured whose purpose was sensual. An example is afforded by Maria von Merian's Metamorphosis Insectorum Surinamenis (1705).

Secondly were descriptive and systematic (classificatory) works usually confined to what are now known as the Insecta. Of the second kind Carl von Linne's 1758 published in 1758 at Uppsala stands proud. In this work the binomial system was finally settled on. Carl Linnaeus| Thirdly were works on developmental biology (life cycles), internal anatomy, physiology and so on. These often covered other invertebrate groups. An example is René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur's Memoires pour Servir a L’Historie des Insectes.

1700–1750

1700

1702

1705

1710

1715

1717

1720

Maria Sybilla Merian

1730

1731

1734

1737

1738

1739

1740

1745

1746

1748

1749

1750–1800

1752

1753

1757

1758

1759

Johann Christian Schreber

1760

1761

1762

1763

1764

Plate 1 Schaeffer, Jacob Christian (1766) Elementa entomologica.

1765

1766

1767

Bonnet

1770

1771

1772

1773

1774

1775

1776

1777

Eugen Johann Christoph Esper.

1778

1779

1780

1781

1782

1783

1785

1786

1787

1788

1789.

1790

1791

Plate from Johann Ludwig Christ Naturgeschichte, Klassifikation und Nomenklatur der Insekten vom Bienen

1792

1793

1796

Karl Ernst von Baer.

1797

1798

1799

See also

References

  1. http://gallica.bnf.fr/?&lang=EN online
  2. "Book of Nature". World Digital Library. 1481-08-20. Retrieved 2013-08-27. Check date values in: |date= (help)

External links

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