Carl Reinhold Sahlberg

Carl Reinhold Sahlberg.Portrait by Johan Erik Lindh

Carl Reinhold Sahlberg (January 22, 1779, Eura – October 18, 1860, Yläne) was a Finno-Swede naturalist, primarily an entomologist specializing in beetles.

Biography

In 1818 Carl Reinhold Sahlberg succeeded Carl Niclas Hellenius as professor of economy and natural history at Finland’s then only University in Turku (Åbo), the Academy of Åbo. In 1827 the town and the university were destroyed by fire. The remnants of the natural history collections were taken to Helsingfors where the University then moved under the name of Imperial University Alexander of Helsingfors (and eventually became University of Helsinki in 1918 — the old chair in economy and natural history was renamed "zoology and botany"). Sahlberg replaced the lost collections, played a major role in establishing a new botanical garden in Helsingfors, and with his pupils organised a scientific society "Societas pro fauna et flora fennica". Its only scope was natural history. The society widened to include other sectors of biology only in 1921 .

Works

Collections

Sahlberg's insect collection is in the Finnish Museum of Natural History.

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carl Reinhold Sahlberg.