Felicjan Sypniewski

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Felicjan Sypniewski
Born (1822-01-24)24 January 1822
Piotrowo (Sypniewski family estate, currently part of city of Poznań, Poland)
Died 6 September 1877(1877-09-06) (aged 55)
Piotrowo estate
Nationality Polish
Fields Natural history
Known for diatoms study
Influences Georges-Louis Leclerc
Influenced Carl Sprengel, Justus von Liebig

Felicjan Odrowąż Sypniewski (1822 – 1877) was a Polish naturalist, botanist, entomologist, malacologist, algologist and philosopher.

His ground-breaking studies and scientific publications influenced the next generations of Polish naturalists and have laid down foundations of malacology.

Early life

Born on one of the largest Sypniewski estates in Greater Poland into a Polish noble family, he was the first son of Stanislaus Sypniewski (crest Odrowąż) and Anna Powelska (crest Nałęcz). Due to events following Partitions of Poland this part of Poland was occupied by Germany during his entire life time, thus his official citizenship was German.

Education

As with most of the nobility at that time, he was home-schooled first by private teachers from Switzerland, UK and France, then he attended one of the best secondary schools in Poland at the time, Saint Mary Magdalene High School in Poznań.[1] In 1840 he took a couple years of field practice on his family estate in Truskałowo before continuing education at the Academy of Agriculture in Resko and at Berlin University.

Studies

After finishing his education, he settled and worked in Skoraszewice, Piotrowo, Pempowo and Sypniewo (all within his family's vast estate at that time), where he worked on natural history in general, and published multiple studies and expertises in entomology, malacology and algology, as well as occasional medical and philosophical treatises, among many others. In his later years he focused on studying algaes and seaweed. For his scientific work on diatoms he was offered the position of Dean of Zoology at the Jagiellonian University, the most renowned and oldest of Polish universities. He was one of the founders and unanimously elected the President of the Faculty of Natural Sciences of the Poznańskie Towarzystwo Przyjaciół Nauk (PTPN),[2] renowned Polish Society of Science (and the only Polish such society allowed to exist in occupied Poland at that time - hence its name "Poznańskie" - which means "of Poznan city" - instead of "Polish", since the term "Polish" was forbidden under the German occupation laws).

Legacy

He collected and properly preserved (using his own-devised process) more than 10,000 specimens of butterflies and spiders alone, some of which are the only existing examples of species considered extinct today. This enormous collection had been split and stolen few times: particularly during World War I by Germans in 1918, and thrice during World War II: again by Germans in 1940 and in 1944, and the remaining part of the collection had been taken by the Soviet Red Army in the summer of 1945. Specimens from his collection can be found today at many European universities and museums, mostly in Russia and Germany, and in private collections as well.

In recognition of his contribution to science there are schools named after him or having Felicjan Sypniewski as their patron [3]

References

  1. "Liceum Ogólnokształcące św. Marii Magdaleny w Poznaniu". Ministry of Education, Poland. p. l. Retrieved 2013-12-27. 
  2. "PTPN". Poznańskie Towarzystwo Przyjaciół Nauk. p. l. Retrieved 2013-12-27. 
  3. "About Our School Patron (website in Polish)". Felicjan Sypniewski High School No.30 in Poznan. p. l. Retrieved 2013-12-27. 
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