About: François Huber   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

He was born in Geneva, of a family which had already made its mark in the literary and scientific world: his great-aunt, Marie Huber, was known as a voluminous writer on religious and theological subjects; and his father Jean Huber (1721–1786), who had served for many years as a soldier, was a prominent member of the coterie at Ferney, distinguishing himself by his Observations sur le vol des oiseaux (Geneva, 1784).

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • François Huber
  • François Huber
rdfs:comment
  • He was born in Geneva, of a family which had already made its mark in the literary and scientific world: his great-aunt, Marie Huber, was known as a voluminous writer on religious and theological subjects; and his father Jean Huber (1721–1786), who had served for many years as a soldier, was a prominent member of the coterie at Ferney, distinguishing himself by his Observations sur le vol des oiseaux (Geneva, 1784).
  • François Huber o Franz Huber (2 de julio de 1750 - 22 de diciembre de 1831) fue un naturalista suizo. Vivió en Ginebra, proviene de una familia que ya había hecho su marca en el mundo literario y científico: su madre, Marie Huber, era conocida como escritora en temas religiosos y teológicos, y como la traductora de El Espectador (Amsterdam, 3 vols., 1753); y su padre Jean Huber (1721-1786), quién había servido durante muchos años como soldado, era un miembro prominente del corrillo Ferney, editó un libro titulado Observaciones sobre el vuelo de las aves (Ginebra, 1784).
sameAs
dcterms:subject
Name
  • François Huber
  • François Huber
dbkwik:beekeeping/...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:apicultura/...iPageUsesTemplate
sopt
  • t
Color
  • grey
ID
  • Huber,+François
sname
  • François Huber
abstract
  • He was born in Geneva, of a family which had already made its mark in the literary and scientific world: his great-aunt, Marie Huber, was known as a voluminous writer on religious and theological subjects; and his father Jean Huber (1721–1786), who had served for many years as a soldier, was a prominent member of the coterie at Ferney, distinguishing himself by his Observations sur le vol des oiseaux (Geneva, 1784). François Huber was only fifteen years old when he began to suffer from a disease which gradually resulted in total blindness; but, with the aid of his wife, Marie Aimée Lullin, and of his servant, François Burnens, he was able to carry out investigations that laid the foundations of a scientific knowledge of the life history of the honey bee. His Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles was published at Geneva in 1792 (Eng. trans., 1806). A second volume of work published along with the first came out in 1814 which covered many more subjects including the construction of comb and experiments on the respiration of bees. He assisted Jean Senebier in his Mém. sur l'influence de l'air, etc., dans la germination (Geneva, 1800); and he also wrote "Mém. sur l'origine de la cire" (Bibliothèque britannique, tome xxv.), a "Lettre a M. Pictet sur certains dangers que courent les abeilles" (Bib. brit. xxvii), and "Nouvelles Observ. rel. au sphinx Atropos" (Bib. brit. xxvii). He died in Lausanne on 22 December 1831. A. P. de Candolle gave his name to a genus of Brazilian trees—Huberia burma.
  • François Huber o Franz Huber (2 de julio de 1750 - 22 de diciembre de 1831) fue un naturalista suizo. Vivió en Ginebra, proviene de una familia que ya había hecho su marca en el mundo literario y científico: su madre, Marie Huber, era conocida como escritora en temas religiosos y teológicos, y como la traductora de El Espectador (Amsterdam, 3 vols., 1753); y su padre Jean Huber (1721-1786), quién había servido durante muchos años como soldado, era un miembro prominente del corrillo Ferney, editó un libro titulado Observaciones sobre el vuelo de las aves (Ginebra, 1784). François Huber sólo tenía quince años cuando empezó a padecer una enfermedad que gradualmente producía la ceguera total; pero, con la ayuda de su esposa, Marie Aimée Lullin, y de su sirviente, François Burnens, pudo llevar a cabo investigaciones que pusieron las bases de un conocimiento científico de la historia de vida de la abeja de miel. Su libro Nuevas Observaciones sobre las abejas, se publicó en Ginebra en 1802 (traducido al ingés en 1806). Asistió a Jean Senebier en sus Mémoire sur l'influence de l'air, etc., dans la germination (Ginebra, 1800); y también escribió Mémoire sur l'origine de la cire (Bibliothéque britannique, tome xxv.), Lettre a M. Pictet sur certains dangers que courent les abeilles (Bib. brit. xxvii), y Nouvelles observations relatives au sphinx Atropos (Bib. brit. xxvii). Augustin Pyrame de Candolle, otro naturalista suizo, nombró en su homenaje un género de árboles que describió en Brasil Huberia burma. Murió en Lausana el 22 de diciembre de 1831.
Alternative Linked Data Views: ODE     Raw Data in: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON ) | Microdata ( JSON HTML) | JSON-LD    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3217, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Standard Edition
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2012 OpenLink Software