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Ferdinand von Mueller

Baron Sir Ferdinand Jacob Heinrich von Mueller, KCMG (German: Müller; 30 June 1825 – 10 October 1896) was a German-Australian physician, geographer, and most notably, a botanist. He was appointed government botanist for the then colony of Victoria (Australia) by Governor Charles La Trobe in 1853, and later director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne. He also founded the National Herbarium of Victoria. He named many Australian plants.

Ferdinand von Mueller
Ferdinand von Mueller
Born(1825-06-30)30 June 1825
Died10 October 1896(1896-10-10) (aged 71)
NationalityGerman-Australian
CitizenshipNaturalised British Subject in South Australia and Victoria
AwardsClarke Medal (1883)
Royal Medal (1888)
Scientific career
Fieldsbotany, medicine, geography
Author abbrev. (botany)F.Muell.

Early life

Mueller was born at Rostock, in the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. After the early death of his parents, Frederick and Louisa, his grandparents gave him a good education in Tönning, Schleswig. Apprenticed to a chemist at the age of 15, he passed his pharmaceutical examinations and studied botany under Professor Ernst Ferdinand Nolte (1791–1875) at Kiel University. In 1847, he received his degree of Doctor of Philosophy from Kiel for a thesis on the plants of the southern regions of Schleswig.[1]

Mueller's sister Bertha had been advised to seek a warmer climate for her health, and the great botanist Ludwig Preiss, who had recently returned from Perth, recommended Australia,[2] so in 1847, Mueller and his two surviving sisters sailed from Bremen. While still on the ship, he reportedly fished his first plants out of the water to analyse them.

Australia

von Mueller was one of a number of influential German-speaking residents — such as Ludwig Becker, Hermann Beckler, William Blandowski, Amalie Dietrich, Wilhelm Haacke, Diedrich Henne, Gerard Krefft, Johann Luehmann, Johann Menge, Carl Mücke (a.k.a. Muecke), Ludwig Preiss, Carl Ludwig Christian Rümker (a.k.a. Ruemker), Moritz Richard Schomburgk, Richard Wolfgang Semon, Karl Theodor Staiger, George Ulrich, Eugene von Guérard, Robert von Lendenfeld, Georg von Neumayer, and Carl Wilhelmi — who brought their "epistemic traditions" to Australia, and not only became "deeply entangled with the Australian colonial project", but also were "intricately involved in imagining, knowing and shaping colonial Australia" (Barrett, et al., 2018, p.2).[3]

He arrived at Adelaide on 18 December 1847 and found employment as a chemist with Moritz J. Heuzenroeder, in Rundle Street. He was an inveterate explorer, walking alone to Mount Arden and Mount Brown during his first year. Shortly afterwards, he obtained 20 acres (8.1 ha) of land not far from Adelaide in the Bugle Ranges, and had a cottage built there. He moved there with his sister Clara, intending to start a farm, but after a few months, he returned to his former employment.[2]

Mueller thought to open a chemist's shop in the gold diggings, so in 1851, he moved to Melbourne, capital of the new colony of Victoria.[2] He had contributed a few papers on botanical subjects to German periodicals, and in 1852, sent a paper to the Linnean Society of London on "The Flora of South Australia", thus beginning to be well known in botanical circles.

Victorian Government Botanist

 

Mueller was appointed government botanist for Victoria by Governor Charles La Trobe in 1853, a post that was newly created for him. He examined its flora, especially the Alpine vegetation of Australia, which was previously unknown.[4] He explored the Buffalo Ranges, then went to the upper reaches of the Goulburn River and across Gippsland to the coast. The neighbourhoods of Port Albert and Wilsons Promontory were explored, and the journey of some 1,500 miles (2,400 km) was completed along the coast to Melbourne.

In the same year, he established the National Herbarium of Victoria, which can still be visited today. It has many plants from Australia and abroad, many of which were collected by Mueller. Also, his large private library was transferred to the government of Victoria in 1865 and is incorporated into the library of the herbarium in Melbourne.[5]

Mueller was then nominated as the botanist to accompany the North Australian Exploring Expedition (1855-1856) led by Augustus Gregory, and decided to join despite initial hesitations.[6] He explored the Victoria River and other portions of North Australia, was one of the four who reached Termination Lake in 1856, and accompanied Gregory's expedition overland to Moreton Bay.[4] Mueller, for his part, found nearly 800 species in Australia new to science, such as Macadamia ternifolia (named after his friend and colleague, John Macadam).[7] He published in this year his Definitions of Rare or Hitherto Undescribed Australian Plants.

From 1854 to 1872, Mueller was a member of the Victorian Institute for the Advancement of Science, which later became the Philosophical Institute of Victoria. He was president of the Philosophical Institute in 1859 when it received a royal charter and became the Royal Society of Victoria. He was an active member of the society's "Exploration Committee" which established the Burke and Wills expedition of 1860. Mueller promoted the exploration of Australia, and as one of only two members of the Exploration Committee with any experience of exploration, he made several speeches to the society on the topic. He did not favour the selection of Burke as leader, but due to factionalism in the committee, he had little say in the establishment, provisioning, or composition of the exploration party.[8]

 
Bust of Mueller at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne.

From 1857 to 1873, he was director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne, and not only introduced many plants into Victoria, but also made the excellent qualities of the blue gum (Eucalyptus globulus) known all over the world, and succeeded in introducing it into the south of Europe, North and South Africa, California, and the extratropical portions of South America.[4]

Mueller was decorated by many foreign countries, including Germany, France, Spain, Denmark, and Portugal.[4] He was appointed a fellow of the Royal Society in 1861, and knighted as Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George in 1879. A list of his 'Orders, offices, affiliations and sundry honours' has been assembled.[9] Many of his decorations were received in return for supplying zoological specimens to royal museums.[10]

He was the benefactor of explorer Ernest Giles, who visited Lake Amadeus and Kata Tjuta. Giles had originally wanted to name these Lake Mueller and Mt Ferdinand,[11] but Mueller prevailed upon Giles to name them Lake Amadeus, after King Amadeus of Spain, and Mt Olga, after Queen Olga of Württemberg; both kings had granted him honours. In 1871, King Karl of Württemberg gave him the hereditary title of Freiherr, to mark his distinction in 'natural sciences generally and in particular for the natural history collections and institutions of Our Kingdom'[12] He was then known as Baron Sir Ferdinand von Mueller.[13]

By 1873, influential Melburnians were critical of Mueller's scientific and educational approach with the Royal Botanic Gardens. Development of the gardens with an eye to aesthetics was sought. Mueller was dismissed from his position as director of the Botanic Gardens on 31 May 1873.[14] He had done much to develop the gardens with the scarce resources at hand. Though his pay was not affected and he still continued as the government botanist, he never lost his sense of grievance over losing the position.

In April 1873, Mueller had created the genus Guilfoylia and described William Guilfoyle as "distinguished as a collector [who] evidenced great ardour" and held high hopes for his collecting ability. Mueller's opinion changed when Guilfoyle was appointed to take his place as director of the Botanic Gardens in July 1873. He accused Guilfoyle of being a "nurseryman [with] no claims to scientific knowledge whatever" and of getting the job due to being related to the wife of the responsible minister. Mueller subsequently abolished Guilfoylia as part of the genus of Cadellia in his botanical census of 1882 (today the genus Guilfoylia is again accepted).[15] Guilfoyle went on to landscape the gardens in an aesthetic and pleasing style welcomed by most Melburnians.[16]

In 1857, Mueller applied for and was granted the degree of Doctor of Medicine of the University of Rostock;[17] in 1883, he was awarded the Clarke Medal by the Royal Society of New South Wales.

He published 11 volumes of Fragmenta phytographiae Australiae (1862–1881), two volumes of the Plants of Victoria (1860–1865), and other books on the Eucalyptus, Myoporaceae, Acacia, and Salsolaceae, all profusely illustrated. He also co-operated in the production of George Bentham's Flora Australiensis.[18] He described many novel plant species sent by botanists from other parts of Australia, notably Maurice William Holtze from the Northern Territory, and encouraged settlers to send plants to him. Women were key contributors to his collections. Two hundred twenty-five women and girls, the youngest of which was six years of age, collected plant specimens and mailed them to Mueller for cataloging.[19] These women included Louisa Atkinson, Sarah Brooks, and Flora Mary Campbell.[20] He took a leading part in promoting Australian exploration, especially the Burke and Wills expedition, which was the first to cross the continent, and in the various attempts to unravel the mystery which attended the fate of his fellow countryman Ludwig Leichhardt (1813–1848).[4]

Mueller died in Melbourne and is buried in the St Kilda Cemetery. He was survived by his sister, Mrs. Clara Wehl, of Millicent, South Australia. His other sister, Mrs. Bertha Doughty of near Penola predeceased him. He never married.[2]

Mueller was a theist who rejected Darwinism, but is said by historians to have misunderstood key aspects[clarification needed] of Charles Darwin's theory. Despite his differences he remained on friendly terms with Darwin.[21]

Standard author abbreviation

Legacy

The Mueller Medal has been awarded since 1904 by the Australian and New Zealand Association for the Advancement of Science to "a scientist who is the author of important contributions to anthropological, botanical, geological or zoological science, preferably with special reference to Australia".[23]

A Victorian Railways S Class diesel-electric locomotive, S311, is named after Mueller.

Places named after Mueller

A number of geographical features were named after Mueller: the Mueller Ranges (Western Australia), Muellers Range (Queensland), Mount Mueller (in WA, Northern Territory, Tasmania and Victoria) and Mount von Mueller (WA), Muellers Peak (New South Wales), the Mueller River (NZ), Muellers Creek (South Australia) and Mueller Creek (NT), Lake Mueller (Qld), and Mueller hut near the Mueller Glacier in New Zealand. Mueller Park, Subiaco (WA) is also named after him.

Artworks based on Mueller

  • Love, Death, Music and Plants, a music theatre work based on scenes from the life of Mueller, was written by Brian Lipson (writer) and Matthew Hindson (composer), and had a two-week season at the Mueller Hall, National Herbarium of Victoria, 18–30 November 2003.[24]
  • A bust of Mueller by Marc Clark is located outside the National Herbarium of Victoria.[25]

Plants named after Mueller

Species named to honour Mueller typically end in muelleri, muellerina or muelleriana. Examples include the genus, Muellerina (Loranthaceae), the taxa Callitris muelleri, Persoonia muelleri, and Verticordia muelleriana, Allocasuarina muelleriana and Eucalyptus muelleriana, and Terminalia ferdinandiana.[26]

Animals named after Mueller

A species of Australian lizard, Lerista muelleri, is named in his honour,[27] as well as a number of fish and invertebrates.[28]

Journals named after Mueller

The in-house journal, Muelleria (journal), of the National Herbarium of Victoria is dedicated to Mueller.

See also

Bibliography

  1. Chisholm, A. H., Ferdinand von Mueller, Great Australians, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1962
  2. Home, R.W. (ed), Australian Science in the Making: A Bicentennial History (1990) ISBN 0-521-39640-9
  3. Home, R.W. et al. (eds) Regardfully yours: selected correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller.3 vols Peter Lang, Berne. 1998–2006
  4. Kynaston, Edward, A Man on Edge: A life of Baron Sir Ferdinand von Mueller, Allen Lane, London; Ringwood, 1981
  5. Mueller, Dr Ferdinand von, 1858. An historical review of the explorations of Australia. Melbourne: Philosophical Institute.
  6. Mueller, Dr Ferdinand von, 1863. "Enumeration of the plants collected by Dr J Murray during Mr A Howitt's Expedition into Central Australia in the year 1862". Annual Report of the Government Botanist, pp. 16–18.
  7. Mueller, Dr Ferdinand von, 1865. "On the systematic position of the Nardoo plant and the physiological characteristics of its fruit". Transactions and proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria: During the years 1861 to 1864, pp 137–147.
  8. Voigt, Johannes H., Die Erforschung Australiens: Der Briefwechsel zwischen August Petermann and Ferdinand von Mueller 1861–1878, Justus Perthes Verlag, Gotha, 1996

Additional publications online

  • Index perfectus ad Caroli Linnaei : species plantarum / collatore Ferdinando de Mueller. (1880)
  • Eucalyptographia. A descriptive atlas of the eucalypts of Australia and the adjoining islands (1879–1884)
  • Iconography of Australian species of Acacia and cognate genera (1887)
  • Select extra-tropical plants readily eligible for industrial culture or naturalisation (1891)
  • Introduction to botanic teachings at the schools of Victoria (1877)
  • The organic constituents of plants and vegetable substances and their chemical analysis (1878)
  • Manuel de l'acclimateur (1887)
  • Fragmenta phytographiæ Australiæ /contulit Ferdinandus Mueller (1858–1882)
  • The plants indigenous to the colony of Victoria, Volume 1 (1860–1862)
  • Key to the system of Victorian plants (1887/88)
  • The Vegetation of the Chatham Islands (1864)
  • Iconography of Salsolaceous plants (1889) R.S. Brain Government Printer, Melbourne.

Notes

  1. ^ Doctoral certificate, University of Kiel, 2 August 1847, reproduced in Home et al. Vol. 1, p 99.
  2. ^ a b c d Interview with F E H W Krichauff South Australian Register 12 October 1896 p.7 accessed 20 August 2011
  3. ^ In relation to "Australasia", another German-speaking explorer and geologist, Julius von Haast (1822-1887), was appointed as the inaugural Curator/Director of the Canterbury Museum, in Christchurch, New Zealand in 1867.
  4. ^ a b c d e Chisholm 1911.
  5. ^ Victoria,1864– 5, Parliamentary Papers, No, 72: "Annual Report of the Government Botanist and Director of the Botanic Garden.
  6. ^ Home, RW; Lucas, AM; Maroske, Sara; Sinkora, DM; Voigt, JH (1998). Regardfully Yours: Selected Correspondence of Ferdinand Von Mueller. Peter Lang Publishing. pp. 30–31. ISBN 9780820442136.
  7. ^ Mueller, Ferdinand (1858). "Account of some New Australian Plants". Transactions of the Philosophical Institute of Victoria. 2: 72.
  8. ^ Lost Explorers by Ed Wright Murdock Books 2008 ISBN 978-1-74196-139-3
  9. ^ Home et al., vol 3, pp. 838 – 858.
  10. ^ Lucas, A M (2013) Specimens and the Currency of Honour: the Museum Trade of Ferdinand von Mueller, Historical Records of Australian Science, 24:15–39
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 January 2013. Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  12. ^ Letters patent by Karl I, 6 July 1871, reproduced and translated in Home et al., vol 2, pp 580 – 582
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 July 2005. Retrieved 31 October 2005.
  14. ^ Helen M Cohn and Sara Maroske 'Relief from duties of minor importance: the removal of Baron von Mueller from the directorship of the Melbourne Botanic Gardens', Victorian Historical Journal, 67, (1996) pp. 103–127
  15. ^ "Guilfoylia F.Muell. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Powo.science.kew.org. Retrieved 30 June 2022.
  16. ^ Weston Bate, 'Perceptions of Melbourne's "Pride and glory"', Victorian Historical Journal, vol 67, 4 – 16, 1996
  17. ^ Degree certificate transcribed and translated in Home et al, vol 1, pp 334–336;
  18. ^ Lucas, A. M. Assistance at a distance: George Bentham, Ferdinand von Mueller and the production of Flora australiensis. Archives of natural history 30 (2): 255–281. 2003
  19. ^ Maroske, Sara (2014). "'A taste for botanic science': Ferdinand Mueller's female collectors and the history of Australian botany". CiteSeerX 10.1.1.695.7872. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  20. ^ Maroske, S. and Vaughan, A. (2014). Ferdinand Mueller’s female plant collectors: a biographical register. Muelleria, 32: 92–172
  21. ^ Lucas, A. M. (2010). Ferdinand von Mueller's interactions with Charles Darwin and his response to Darwinism. Archives of Natural History 37: 102–130.
  22. ^ International Plant Names Index.  F.Muell.
  23. ^ ANZAAS > Mueller Medal Recipients (1904–2005) archive.is Retrieved 9 July 2017,
  24. ^ "Garden genius lauded in song". Theage.com.au. 14 November 2003.
  25. ^ Centre, The University of Melbourne eScholarship Research. "Image - Bust of Baron Ferdinand von Mueller, sculpted by Marc Clark, located outside the Nation Herbarium of Victoria. - Encyclopedia of Australian Science". Eoas.info. Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  26. ^ Exell, A.W. (1935). "Notes from the British Museum Herbarium" (PDF). Journal of Botany, British and Foreign. 73: 263.
  27. ^ Beolens B, Watkins M, Grayson M (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Mueller, F.J.H.", p. 184).
  28. ^ A. M. Lucas (2013) Zoological eponyms honouring the botanist, Ferdinand von Mueller, Archives of Natural History, 40:263–269,

References

  • Barrett, L., Eckstein, L., Hurley, A.W. & Schwarz A. (2018), "Remembering German-Australian Colonial Entanglement: An Introduction", Postcolonial Studies, Vol.21, No.1, (January 2018), pp.1-5. doi:10.1080/13688790.2018.1443671
  • Serle, Percival (1949). "Mueller, Ferdinand". Dictionary of Australian Biography. Sydney: Angus & Robertson.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Müller, Ferdinand von, Baron". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 18 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 961.

External links

  • Australian Dictionary of Biography (vol 5): Sir Ferdinand Jakob Heinrich von Mueller (1825–1896) – Australian National University, National Centre of Biography .
  • Online Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller Searchable full texts of over 5000 letters to and from Ferdinand von Mueller
  • RBG.vic.gov: Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne website
  • Burkeandwills.net: Burke & Wills Expedition website – comprehensive, with many historical documents relating to the expedition.
  • Burkeandwills.net: "An historical review of the exploration of Australia" – online transcript of Mueller's 1857 talk to the Philosophical Institute of Victoria.
  • Burkeandwills.org: The Burke & Wills Expedition Historical Society
  • Australian Museum: "Descriptive notes on Papuan plants" by von Mueller
Awards
Preceded by Clarke Medal
1883
Succeeded by

ferdinand, mueller, baron, ferdinand, jacob, heinrich, mueller, kcmg, german, müller, june, 1825, october, 1896, german, australian, physician, geographer, most, notably, botanist, appointed, government, botanist, then, colony, victoria, australia, governor, c. Baron Sir Ferdinand Jacob Heinrich von Mueller KCMG German Muller 30 June 1825 10 October 1896 was a German Australian physician geographer and most notably a botanist He was appointed government botanist for the then colony of Victoria Australia by Governor Charles La Trobe in 1853 and later director of the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne He also founded the National Herbarium of Victoria He named many Australian plants Ferdinand von MuellerFerdinand von MuellerBorn 1825 06 30 30 June 1825Rostock GermanyDied10 October 1896 1896 10 10 aged 71 Melbourne AustraliaNationalityGerman AustralianCitizenshipNaturalised British Subject in South Australia and VictoriaAwardsClarke Medal 1883 Royal Medal 1888 Scientific careerFieldsbotany medicine geographyAuthor abbrev botany F Muell Contents 1 Early life 2 Australia 3 Victorian Government Botanist 4 Standard author abbreviation 5 Legacy 5 1 Places named after Mueller 5 2 Artworks based on Mueller 5 3 Plants named after Mueller 5 4 Animals named after Mueller 5 5 Journals named after Mueller 6 See also 7 Bibliography 8 Additional publications online 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksEarly life EditMueller was born at Rostock in the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg Schwerin After the early death of his parents Frederick and Louisa his grandparents gave him a good education in Tonning Schleswig Apprenticed to a chemist at the age of 15 he passed his pharmaceutical examinations and studied botany under Professor Ernst Ferdinand Nolte 1791 1875 at Kiel University In 1847 he received his degree of Doctor of Philosophy from Kiel for a thesis on the plants of the southern regions of Schleswig 1 Mueller s sister Bertha had been advised to seek a warmer climate for her health and the great botanist Ludwig Preiss who had recently returned from Perth recommended Australia 2 so in 1847 Mueller and his two surviving sisters sailed from Bremen While still on the ship he reportedly fished his first plants out of the water to analyse them Australia Editvon Mueller was one of a number of influential German speaking residents such as Ludwig Becker Hermann Beckler William Blandowski Amalie Dietrich Wilhelm Haacke Diedrich Henne Gerard Krefft Johann Luehmann Johann Menge Carl Mucke a k a Muecke Ludwig Preiss Carl Ludwig Christian Rumker a k a Ruemker Moritz Richard Schomburgk Richard Wolfgang Semon Karl Theodor Staiger George Ulrich Eugene von Guerard Robert von Lendenfeld Georg von Neumayer and Carl Wilhelmi who brought their epistemic traditions to Australia and not only became deeply entangled with the Australian colonial project but also were intricately involved in imagining knowing and shaping colonial Australia Barrett et al 2018 p 2 3 He arrived at Adelaide on 18 December 1847 and found employment as a chemist with Moritz J Heuzenroeder in Rundle Street He was an inveterate explorer walking alone to Mount Arden and Mount Brown during his first year Shortly afterwards he obtained 20 acres 8 1 ha of land not far from Adelaide in the Bugle Ranges and had a cottage built there He moved there with his sister Clara intending to start a farm but after a few months he returned to his former employment 2 Mueller thought to open a chemist s shop in the gold diggings so in 1851 he moved to Melbourne capital of the new colony of Victoria 2 He had contributed a few papers on botanical subjects to German periodicals and in 1852 sent a paper to the Linnean Society of London on The Flora of South Australia thus beginning to be well known in botanical circles Victorian Government Botanist Edit Mueller was appointed government botanist for Victoria by Governor Charles La Trobe in 1853 a post that was newly created for him He examined its flora especially the Alpine vegetation of Australia which was previously unknown 4 He explored the Buffalo Ranges then went to the upper reaches of the Goulburn River and across Gippsland to the coast The neighbourhoods of Port Albert and Wilsons Promontory were explored and the journey of some 1 500 miles 2 400 km was completed along the coast to Melbourne In the same year he established the National Herbarium of Victoria which can still be visited today It has many plants from Australia and abroad many of which were collected by Mueller Also his large private library was transferred to the government of Victoria in 1865 and is incorporated into the library of the herbarium in Melbourne 5 Mueller was then nominated as the botanist to accompany the North Australian Exploring Expedition 1855 1856 led by Augustus Gregory and decided to join despite initial hesitations 6 He explored the Victoria River and other portions of North Australia was one of the four who reached Termination Lake in 1856 and accompanied Gregory s expedition overland to Moreton Bay 4 Mueller for his part found nearly 800 species in Australia new to science such as Macadamia ternifolia named after his friend and colleague John Macadam 7 He published in this year his Definitions of Rare or Hitherto Undescribed Australian Plants From 1854 to 1872 Mueller was a member of the Victorian Institute for the Advancement of Science which later became the Philosophical Institute of Victoria He was president of the Philosophical Institute in 1859 when it received a royal charter and became the Royal Society of Victoria He was an active member of the society s Exploration Committee which established the Burke and Wills expedition of 1860 Mueller promoted the exploration of Australia and as one of only two members of the Exploration Committee with any experience of exploration he made several speeches to the society on the topic He did not favour the selection of Burke as leader but due to factionalism in the committee he had little say in the establishment provisioning or composition of the exploration party 8 Bust of Mueller at the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne From 1857 to 1873 he was director of the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne and not only introduced many plants into Victoria but also made the excellent qualities of the blue gum Eucalyptus globulus known all over the world and succeeded in introducing it into the south of Europe North and South Africa California and the extratropical portions of South America 4 Mueller was decorated by many foreign countries including Germany France Spain Denmark and Portugal 4 He was appointed a fellow of the Royal Society in 1861 and knighted as Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George in 1879 A list of his Orders offices affiliations and sundry honours has been assembled 9 Many of his decorations were received in return for supplying zoological specimens to royal museums 10 He was the benefactor of explorer Ernest Giles who visited Lake Amadeus and Kata Tjuta Giles had originally wanted to name these Lake Mueller and Mt Ferdinand 11 but Mueller prevailed upon Giles to name them Lake Amadeus after King Amadeus of Spain and Mt Olga after Queen Olga of Wurttemberg both kings had granted him honours In 1871 King Karl of Wurttemberg gave him the hereditary title of Freiherr to mark his distinction in natural sciences generally and in particular for the natural history collections and institutions of Our Kingdom 12 He was then known as Baron Sir Ferdinand von Mueller 13 By 1873 influential Melburnians were critical of Mueller s scientific and educational approach with the Royal Botanic Gardens Development of the gardens with an eye to aesthetics was sought Mueller was dismissed from his position as director of the Botanic Gardens on 31 May 1873 14 He had done much to develop the gardens with the scarce resources at hand Though his pay was not affected and he still continued as the government botanist he never lost his sense of grievance over losing the position In April 1873 Mueller had created the genus Guilfoylia and described William Guilfoyle as distinguished as a collector who evidenced great ardour and held high hopes for his collecting ability Mueller s opinion changed when Guilfoyle was appointed to take his place as director of the Botanic Gardens in July 1873 He accused Guilfoyle of being a nurseryman with no claims to scientific knowledge whatever and of getting the job due to being related to the wife of the responsible minister Mueller subsequently abolished Guilfoylia as part of the genus of Cadellia in his botanical census of 1882 today the genus Guilfoylia is again accepted 15 Guilfoyle went on to landscape the gardens in an aesthetic and pleasing style welcomed by most Melburnians 16 In 1857 Mueller applied for and was granted the degree of Doctor of Medicine of the University of Rostock 17 in 1883 he was awarded the Clarke Medal by the Royal Society of New South Wales He published 11 volumes of Fragmenta phytographiae Australiae 1862 1881 two volumes of the Plants of Victoria 1860 1865 and other books on the Eucalyptus Myoporaceae Acacia and Salsolaceae all profusely illustrated He also co operated in the production of George Bentham s Flora Australiensis 18 He described many novel plant species sent by botanists from other parts of Australia notably Maurice William Holtze from the Northern Territory and encouraged settlers to send plants to him Women were key contributors to his collections Two hundred twenty five women and girls the youngest of which was six years of age collected plant specimens and mailed them to Mueller for cataloging 19 These women included Louisa Atkinson Sarah Brooks and Flora Mary Campbell 20 He took a leading part in promoting Australian exploration especially the Burke and Wills expedition which was the first to cross the continent and in the various attempts to unravel the mystery which attended the fate of his fellow countryman Ludwig Leichhardt 1813 1848 4 Mueller died in Melbourne and is buried in the St Kilda Cemetery He was survived by his sister Mrs Clara Wehl of Millicent South Australia His other sister Mrs Bertha Doughty of near Penola predeceased him He never married 2 Mueller was a theist who rejected Darwinism but is said by historians to have misunderstood key aspects clarification needed of Charles Darwin s theory Despite his differences he remained on friendly terms with Darwin 21 Standard author abbreviation EditThe standard author abbreviation F Muell is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 22 Legacy EditThe Mueller Medal has been awarded since 1904 by the Australian and New Zealand Association for the Advancement of Science to a scientist who is the author of important contributions to anthropological botanical geological or zoological science preferably with special reference to Australia 23 A Victorian Railways S Class diesel electric locomotive S311 is named after Mueller Places named after Mueller Edit A number of geographical features were named after Mueller the Mueller Ranges Western Australia Muellers Range Queensland Mount Mueller in WA Northern Territory Tasmania and Victoria and Mount von Mueller WA Muellers Peak New South Wales the Mueller River NZ Muellers Creek South Australia and Mueller Creek NT Lake Mueller Qld and Mueller hut near the Mueller Glacier in New Zealand Mueller Park Subiaco WA is also named after him Artworks based on Mueller Edit Love Death Music and Plants a music theatre work based on scenes from the life of Mueller was written by Brian Lipson writer and Matthew Hindson composer and had a two week season at the Mueller Hall National Herbarium of Victoria 18 30 November 2003 24 A bust of Mueller by Marc Clark is located outside the National Herbarium of Victoria 25 Plants named after Mueller Edit Species named to honour Mueller typically end in muelleri muellerina or muelleriana Examples include the genus Muellerina Loranthaceae the taxa Callitris muelleri Persoonia muelleri and Verticordia muelleriana Allocasuarina muelleriana and Eucalyptus muelleriana and Terminalia ferdinandiana 26 Animals named after Mueller Edit A species of Australian lizard Lerista muelleri is named in his honour 27 as well as a number of fish and invertebrates 28 Journals named after Mueller Edit The in house journal Muelleria journal of the National Herbarium of Victoria is dedicated to Mueller See also EditList of Australian plant species authored by Ferdinand von Mueller Systematic Census of Australian Plants Burke and Wills expedition Cape Leeuwin Wattle Tietkens expedition of 1889 Category Taxa named by Ferdinand von MuellerBibliography EditChisholm A H Ferdinand von Mueller Great Australians Oxford University Press Melbourne 1962 Home R W ed Australian Science in the Making A Bicentennial History 1990 ISBN 0 521 39640 9 Home R W et al eds Regardfully yours selected correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller 3 vols Peter Lang Berne 1998 2006 Kynaston Edward A Man on Edge A life of Baron Sir Ferdinand von Mueller Allen Lane London Ringwood 1981 Mueller Dr Ferdinand von 1858 An historical review of the explorations of Australia Melbourne Philosophical Institute Mueller Dr Ferdinand von 1863 Enumeration of the plants collected by Dr J Murray during Mr A Howitt s Expedition into Central Australia in the year 1862 Annual Report of the Government Botanist pp 16 18 Mueller Dr Ferdinand von 1865 On the systematic position of the Nardoo plant and the physiological characteristics of its fruit Transactions and proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria During the years 1861 to 1864 pp 137 147 Voigt Johannes H Die Erforschung Australiens Der Briefwechsel zwischen August Petermann and Ferdinand von Mueller 1861 1878 Justus Perthes Verlag Gotha 1996Additional publications online EditIndex perfectus ad Caroli Linnaei species plantarum collatore Ferdinando de Mueller 1880 Eucalyptographia A descriptive atlas of the eucalypts of Australia and the adjoining islands 1879 1884 Iconography of Australian species of Acacia and cognate genera 1887 Select extra tropical plants readily eligible for industrial culture or naturalisation 1891 Introduction to botanic teachings at the schools of Victoria 1877 The organic constituents of plants and vegetable substances and their chemical analysis 1878 Manuel de l acclimateur 1887 Fragmenta phytographiae Australiae contulit Ferdinandus Mueller 1858 1882 The plants indigenous to the colony of Victoria Volume 1 1860 1862 Key to the system of Victorian plants 1887 88 The Vegetation of the Chatham Islands 1864 Iconography of Salsolaceous plants 1889 R S Brain Government Printer Melbourne Notes Edit Doctoral certificate University of Kiel 2 August 1847 reproduced in Home et al Vol 1 p 99 a b c d Interview with F E H W Krichauff South Australian Register 12 October 1896 p 7 accessed 20 August 2011 In relation to Australasia another German speaking explorer and geologist Julius von Haast 1822 1887 was appointed as the inaugural Curator Director of the Canterbury Museum in Christchurch New Zealand in 1867 a b c d e Chisholm 1911 Victoria 1864 5 Parliamentary Papers No 72 Annual Report of the Government Botanist and Director of the Botanic Garden Home RW Lucas AM Maroske Sara Sinkora DM Voigt JH 1998 Regardfully Yours Selected Correspondence of Ferdinand Von Mueller Peter Lang Publishing pp 30 31 ISBN 9780820442136 Mueller Ferdinand 1858 Account of some New Australian Plants Transactions of the Philosophical Institute of Victoria 2 72 Lost Explorers by Ed Wright Murdock Books 2008 ISBN 978 1 74196 139 3 Home et al vol 3 pp 838 858 Lucas A M 2013 Specimens and the Currency of Honour the Museum Trade of Ferdinand von Mueller Historical Records of Australian Science 24 15 39 European history uluru Kata Tjuta National Park Archived from the original on 27 January 2013 Retrieved 27 November 2012 Letters patent by Karl I 6 July 1871 reproduced and translated in Home et al vol 2 pp 580 582 The Whitlam Institute The Whitlam Collection Nauru 1888 1900 by Wilhelm Fabricius Archived from the original on 19 July 2005 Retrieved 31 October 2005 Helen M Cohn and Sara Maroske Relief from duties of minor importance the removal of Baron von Mueller from the directorship of the Melbourne Botanic Gardens Victorian Historical Journal 67 1996 pp 103 127 Guilfoylia F Muell Plants of the World Online Kew Science Powo science kew org Retrieved 30 June 2022 Weston Bate Perceptions of Melbourne s Pride and glory Victorian Historical Journal vol 67 4 16 1996 Degree certificate transcribed and translated in Home et al vol 1 pp 334 336 Lucas A M Assistance at a distance George Bentham Ferdinand von Mueller and the production of Flora australiensis Archives of natural history 30 2 255 281 2003 Maroske Sara 2014 A taste for botanic science Ferdinand Mueller s female collectors and the history of Australian botany CiteSeerX 10 1 1 695 7872 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Maroske S and Vaughan A 2014 Ferdinand Mueller s female plant collectors a biographical register Muelleria 32 92 172 Lucas A M 2010 Ferdinand von Mueller s interactions with Charles Darwin and his response to Darwinism Archives of Natural History 37 102 130 International Plant Names Index F Muell ANZAAS gt Mueller Medal Recipients 1904 2005 archive is Retrieved 9 July 2017 Garden genius lauded in song Theage com au 14 November 2003 Centre The University of Melbourne eScholarship Research Image Bust of Baron Ferdinand von Mueller sculpted by Marc Clark located outside the Nation Herbarium of Victoria Encyclopedia of Australian Science Eoas info Retrieved 19 November 2016 Exell A W 1935 Notes from the British Museum Herbarium PDF Journal of Botany British and Foreign 73 263 Beolens B Watkins M Grayson M 2011 The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press xiii 296 pp ISBN 978 1 4214 0135 5 Mueller F J H p 184 A M Lucas 2013 Zoological eponyms honouring the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller Archives of Natural History 40 263 269 References EditBarrett L Eckstein L Hurley A W amp Schwarz A 2018 Remembering German Australian Colonial Entanglement An Introduction Postcolonial Studies Vol 21 No 1 January 2018 pp 1 5 doi 10 1080 13688790 2018 1443671 Serle Percival 1949 Mueller Ferdinand Dictionary of Australian Biography Sydney Angus amp Robertson This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Muller Ferdinand von Baron Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 18 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 961 External links EditAustralian Dictionary of Biography vol 5 Sir Ferdinand Jakob Heinrich von Mueller 1825 1896 Australian National University National Centre of Biography Online Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller Searchable full texts of over 5000 letters to and from Ferdinand von Mueller RBG vic gov Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne website Burkeandwills net Burke amp Wills Expedition website comprehensive with many historical documents relating to the expedition Burkeandwills net An historical review of the exploration of Australia online transcript of Mueller s 1857 talk to the Philosophical Institute of Victoria Burkeandwills org The Burke amp Wills Expedition Historical Society Australian Museum Descriptive notes on Papuan plants by von MuellerAwardsPreceded byJames Dwight Dana Clarke Medal1883 Succeeded byAlfred Richard Cecil Selwyn Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ferdinand von Mueller amp oldid 1150385903, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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