Ophidium Barbatum; Ophidium Aculeatum

Marcus Elieser Bloch, a German physician with a passion for natural history, compiled a groundbreaking ichthyological reference work in the 18th century. Frustrated by his predecessors' incomplete texts, Bloch decided to catalogue all of the world's known fish. His resulting twelve-vo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20129182
id ndltd-NEU--neu-344450
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-NEU--neu-3444502016-04-25T16:57:07ZOphidium Barbatum; Ophidium AculeatumMarcus Elieser Bloch, a German physician with a passion for natural history, compiled a groundbreaking ichthyological reference work in the 18th century. Frustrated by his predecessors' incomplete texts, Bloch decided to catalogue all of the world's known fish. His resulting twelve-volume book, Allgemeine Naturgeschichte der Fische, was published between 1782 and 1795 and described 432 types of fish, 267 of which were previously undiscovered. Bloch's informative text was accompanied by copperplate engravings by several artists and draftsmen, including Gabriel Bodenehr, Johann Friedrich Hennig, Andreas Ludwig Krüger, C. L. Schmidt, J. G. Schmidt, and Ludewig Schmidt, among many others. Created from life, the masterful prints later received color finishes which capture their subjects so accurately that present-day ichthyologists continue to consult them.http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20129182
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
description Marcus Elieser Bloch, a German physician with a passion for natural history, compiled a groundbreaking ichthyological reference work in the 18th century. Frustrated by his predecessors' incomplete texts, Bloch decided to catalogue all of the world's known fish. His resulting twelve-volume book, Allgemeine Naturgeschichte der Fische, was published between 1782 and 1795 and described 432 types of fish, 267 of which were previously undiscovered. Bloch's informative text was accompanied by copperplate engravings by several artists and draftsmen, including Gabriel Bodenehr, Johann Friedrich Hennig, Andreas Ludwig Krüger, C. L. Schmidt, J. G. Schmidt, and Ludewig Schmidt, among many others. Created from life, the masterful prints later received color finishes which capture their subjects so accurately that present-day ichthyologists continue to consult them.
title Ophidium Barbatum; Ophidium Aculeatum
spellingShingle Ophidium Barbatum; Ophidium Aculeatum
title_short Ophidium Barbatum; Ophidium Aculeatum
title_full Ophidium Barbatum; Ophidium Aculeatum
title_fullStr Ophidium Barbatum; Ophidium Aculeatum
title_full_unstemmed Ophidium Barbatum; Ophidium Aculeatum
title_sort ophidium barbatum; ophidium aculeatum
publishDate
url http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20129182
_version_ 1718247404554158080