Frederik Christian Raben
Frederik Christian Raben (23 March 1769 – 6 July 1838) was a Danish count, traveller and amateur naturalist.
Travels
F. C. Raben was the owner of the estate Christiansholm (now "Ålholm") on Lolland and amateur botanist. He travelled in Europe and, unusual for his time, to Greenland[1] and Brazil (1835-1838). He collected many plant specimens during his journey to Brazil. More than 1100 of his herbarium specimens now belong to the Botanical Museum at the University of Copenhagen.[2]
Raben's great auk
Raben brought a specimen of the now extinct great auk back from Iceland in 1821. In 1968, a descendant of his, Baron Raben-Levetzau to Ålholm, put it on auction at Sotheby's in London. The highest bid - £ 9,000 - was given by Finnur Gudmunsson, then director of the Icelandic Natural History Museum. This is the highest price ever paid for a zoological specimen.
Legacy
A number of plant species have been named in his honour, particularly based on his own Brazilian collections, e.g. Miconia rabenii (Melastomaceae), Eleocharis rabenii (Cyperaceae) and Campomanesia rabeniana (Myrtaceae).
References
- ↑ Anonymous (F.C. Raben) (1826). "Udtog af en dagbog, holdet paa en rejse i Grønland i sommeren 1823" [Excerpt of the diary from a travel to Greenland in the summer of 1823]. Tidsskrift for Naturvidenskaberne (Copenhagen) (in Danish). 3: 271–289.
- ↑ Ryding, O. (2002). "Count F.C. Raben's Brazilian herbaria". Taxon. 51: 369–376. doi:10.2307/1554935.