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Ottó Herman

Ottó Herman (26 June 1835 – 27 December 1914) was a Hungarian zoologist, ethnographer, archaeologist, and politician. A polymath recognized as a pioneer of Hungarian natural history research, he made numerous studies on Hungarian spiders, birds, and fishes, and founded the journal Natural History Notebooks and the ornithological journal Aquila. He is called "the Father of the birds" in Hungary. A member of several learned societies including the Royal Hungarian Society of Natural History, Hungarian Linguistics Society, Hungarian Society of Ethnography, he was elected to the Hungarian Parliament.[1][2] The Ottó Herman Museum of Miskolc was named after him.

Ottó Herman
Born(1835-06-26)26 June 1835
Died27 December 1914(1914-12-27) (aged 79)
NationalityHungarian
Scientific career
FieldsOrnithology, Arachnology

Biography edit

Herrmann Károly Ottó was born in Breznóbánya, Kingdom of Hungary (modern day Slovakia) into a Zipser German family. His father Károly Herrmann was a surgeon and his mother Franciska Ganzstuck was from Hammersberg. He started his schooling in Miskolc. He studied engineering in Vienna, however, due to family reasons he couldn't finish his studies. At age 14 he wanted to join the Hungarian revolutionaries of 1848 but was sent home because he couldn't provide a letter of his father's consent. He dropped Karoly from his name and shortened Herrmann to Herman. Later, Herman spent years in military service in the Austrian Army as a punishment for trying deliberately to avoid conscription. He became a well-known journalist and a member of the Hungarian National Assembly. He frequently visited Lajos Kossuth in Torino, Italy.

Herman was an autodidact who immersed himself in a wide variety of zoological (ornithological, ichthyological), speleological, archaeological and ethnographic sources. He was the first person who stated that cavemen lived in Hungary in the past after examining the chopping tools found in the area surrounding Miskolc. His best known works are Spider Faunas of Hungary, Birds Useful and Birds Harmful and the Book of Hungarian Fishery. Herman was the father of Hungarian palaeolithic research and Hungarian speleology. He initiated the Natural History Notebooks and was its editor for 10 years until 1886. He also founded and edited the ornithological review Aquila until the end of his life. Herman established and directed the Hungarian Ornithological Centre, at the time a department of the Hungarian National Museum. He was one of the founding members of the Hungarian Society of Ethnography.

Scientific work edit

In 1864 Herman applied for a conservator position at the Transylvanian Museum Association. The association operated under modest circumstances; the aging head of the Department of Natural Sciences, Sámuel Brassai, managed the collection in Kolozsvár (Cluj) with a single employee. He offered one third of his annual salary of 1000 Forints to hire a conservator. Herman submitted a prepared abino skylark and a stuffed ermine, accompanied by a letter of support from Kálmán Chernel. On 6 April 1864, Brassai announced that he hired an individual from Kőszeg at his own expense.[3]

Herman's multifaceted scientific work and political engagement began with the period 1864–1872 in Kolozsvár. He produced his first major scientific work here on the Eurasian hobby, which was published in 1865 under the title "Falco subbuteo Linné".[4] He wrote a number of popular works in Kolozsvár, for example, "The Art of the Spider" appeared in the 1866 Kolozsvár Almanach. Brassai and Herman had were almost identical in appearance. both wearing shoulder length hair and long beards. The striking exterior masked people who wanted to know and experience everything, especially the life of animals in natural surroundings. However, the two scientists did not share the same character: Brassai loved to spend time on the details, while Herman sought out great generalizations, delving into details only to support his arguments.[5]

Herman did not strive for popularity and despised those scientists who searched out unknown species to have their name remembered in the academic world. Instead, he tried to look for relationships and publish his experiences for the benefit ordinary people. In order to enrich the collection of the Transylvanian Museum, he performed several field trips, for example to the Székely region and the Transylvanian Plain. As a result of his work the zoological collections was becoming more and more rich and notable. He also collected minerals and is noted for his findings of syenite és a ditroite.[3][6]

Due to the growing domestic and international prestige, was soon offered new challenges. Carl Brunner invited him to Vienna to participate in a planned African zoological expedition to Cameroon. The Hungarian Natural History Society, thanks to the efforts of Kálmán Szily and János Frivaldszky, counter-offered with a multi-year scholarship to retain him. Instead of the foreign trip, Herman produced, to great international acclaim, a monograph on the domestic spider fauna, in which he provided descriptions of 328 species of spiders including 36 new ones.[7][8]

He became an employee of the Hungarian National Museum in 1875. Here he was able to publish scientific works such as the above-mentioned monograph on spiders, which appeared in 1875, 1877, and 1878 along with his own illustrations. The three-volume work was all the more popular abroad as the first and the second volumes were written in both Hungarian and German. The third volume was written in Hungarian only, with a German summary in the appendix. The bilingualism of the work was of great importance, since until then most scientific treatises were published in German. These results allowed the Hungarian publications to be read abroad, while serving to establish Hungarian as a language of scientific discourse.[8][9]

Legacy edit

 
Ottó Herman's holiday home in Lillafüred, Hungary

Herman was the author of an enormous quantity of valuable scientific works, totaling 5940 pages. He published 14 books as well as 1140 articles and lectures. He identified 36 new spider species. Today, many schools and institutions bear his name, including one of the largest high schools in Miskolc, the Ottó Herman Gimnázium. In 1953, the museum of Borsod-Miskolc chose Ottó Herman Museum as its name. In 1960, the Hungarian Post issued a commemorative stamp in honour of the 125th anniversary of the birth of Ottó Herman; the stamp was designed by graphic artists József Vertel and László Kékesi. The Ottó Herman Medal was created in 1962 to recognize Hungarian karst and cave explorers. In 1915, the Herman Ottó cave west of Miskolc was named in tribute to the polymath scientist. A lake bearing his name forms part of the Orfű lake system in Baranya county. The Plant Protection Research Institute of the Academy is located in a street named after him in Budapest's II. district.

A species of lace bug, Lasiacantha hermani (Vásárhelyi, 1977) bears his name.[10]

His former home built in 1890 in Lillafüred, which he called "Pele-house", was a tourist hut bearing his name, and is now known as Ottó Herman Memorial House. It is now the home of two permanent exhibitions presenting the scientist's life, as well as the wildlife of the Bükk Mountains. In accordance with Herman's will, his remains were moved from Budapest to Miskolc in 1965 and placed in the Hámori cemetery. His tomb is marked by Miklós Varga's sculpture. In remembrance of his accomplishment, the Ottó Herman National Biology competition is held biannually in Hungary. The City Council of Miskolc has created the Ottó Herman Scientific Award, which is presented annually as part of a celebrations of the City of Miskolc. The first honoree in 2001 was museum curator Lászlo Kárpáti. The year 2014 marked the 100th anniversary of Herman's death; the National Environment Institute organized Herman Otto Commemorative Year at the national level, to honour the scientist and his work. As part of the anniversary celebration, the City Council of Miskolc posthumously awarded honorary citizenship to Herman.

Starting December 2014, Duna Television broadcast a four-part documentary about the life of the scientist, entitled Ottó Herman, the Last Hungarian Polymath.

References edit

  1. ^ Hangay, George (2008). "Herman, Ottó". In Capinera, John L. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Entomology (2nd ed.). Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 1792–1793. ISBN 9781402062421.
  2. ^ Szathmáry, Louis I. (1996). "Otto Herman: Much More Than a Chef". In Walker, Harlan (ed.). Cooks & Other People: Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery, 1995. Totnes, England: Prospect Books. pp. 259–265. ISBN 978-0907325727.
  3. ^ a b Urák, István. "Herman Ottó kolozsvári tevékenysége" (PDF) (in Hungarian). adatbank.transindex.ro. Retrieved 2014-01-22.
  4. ^ Erdődy, Gábor. "Herman Ottó: Az átalakulások világáról – Válogatás Herman Ottó természettudományos, nyelvészeti és archeológiai írásaiból - utószó" (in Hungarian). Budapest: Neumann Kht., 2005. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
  5. ^ Lambrecht, Kálmán (1920). Herman Ottó, Az utolsó magyar polihisztor élete és kora (in Hungarian). Budapest: Bíró Miklós.
  6. ^ Allodiatoris, Irma (1975). "A természettudós Herman Ottó" (PDF) (in Hungarian) (HOM Évkönyv): 7–13. Retrieved 2014-01-30. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. ^ Székely, Sándor (1955). Herman Ottó (in Hungarian). Budapest: Művelt Nép Tudományos és Ismeretterjesztő Könyvkiadó.
  8. ^ a b Hidegh, Ágnes (2003). "Hermann Ottó élete". Herman Ottó portál (in Hungarian). Retrieved 2014-01-10.
  9. ^ Kiss, József (2000). (PDF) (in Hungarian). Miskolc: HOLOCÉN Természetvédelmi egyesület nyomdája. Archived from the original (bibliográfia (PDF)) on 2014-02-04. Retrieved 2015-07-10.
  10. ^ "Lasiacantha hermani Vasarhelyi, 1977". hemiptera-databases.org. Retrieved 2014-02-03.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Ottó Herman at Wikimedia Commons
  • The method for ornithophaenology inauguarated by the Hungarian Central Office of Ornithology (1905)
  • Birds useful and birds harmful (1909)
  • Works by Ottó Herman at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Ottó Herman at Internet Archive

ottó, herman, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, hungarian, april, 2015, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, hungarian, article, machine, translation, like, deep. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Hungarian April 2015 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Hungarian article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 595 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Hungarian Wikipedia article at hu Herman Otto see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated hu Herman Otto to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The native form of this personal name is Herman Otto This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals Otto Herman 26 June 1835 27 December 1914 was a Hungarian zoologist ethnographer archaeologist and politician A polymath recognized as a pioneer of Hungarian natural history research he made numerous studies on Hungarian spiders birds and fishes and founded the journal Natural History Notebooks and the ornithological journal Aquila He is called the Father of the birds in Hungary A member of several learned societies including the Royal Hungarian Society of Natural History Hungarian Linguistics Society Hungarian Society of Ethnography he was elected to the Hungarian Parliament 1 2 The Otto Herman Museum of Miskolc was named after him Otto HermanBorn 1835 06 26 26 June 1835BreznoDied27 December 1914 1914 12 27 aged 79 BudapestNationalityHungarianScientific careerFieldsOrnithology Arachnology Contents 1 Biography 2 Scientific work 3 Legacy 4 References 5 External linksBiography editHerrmann Karoly Otto was born in Breznobanya Kingdom of Hungary modern day Slovakia into a Zipser German family His father Karoly Herrmann was a surgeon and his mother Franciska Ganzstuck was from Hammersberg He started his schooling in Miskolc He studied engineering in Vienna however due to family reasons he couldn t finish his studies At age 14 he wanted to join the Hungarian revolutionaries of 1848 but was sent home because he couldn t provide a letter of his father s consent He dropped Karoly from his name and shortened Herrmann to Herman Later Herman spent years in military service in the Austrian Army as a punishment for trying deliberately to avoid conscription He became a well known journalist and a member of the Hungarian National Assembly He frequently visited Lajos Kossuth in Torino Italy Herman was an autodidact who immersed himself in a wide variety of zoological ornithological ichthyological speleological archaeological and ethnographic sources He was the first person who stated that cavemen lived in Hungary in the past after examining the chopping tools found in the area surrounding Miskolc His best known works are Spider Faunas of Hungary Birds Useful and Birds Harmful and the Book of Hungarian Fishery Herman was the father of Hungarian palaeolithic research and Hungarian speleology He initiated the Natural History Notebooks and was its editor for 10 years until 1886 He also founded and edited the ornithological review Aquila until the end of his life Herman established and directed the Hungarian Ornithological Centre at the time a department of the Hungarian National Museum He was one of the founding members of the Hungarian Society of Ethnography Scientific work editIn 1864 Herman applied for a conservator position at the Transylvanian Museum Association The association operated under modest circumstances the aging head of the Department of Natural Sciences Samuel Brassai managed the collection in Kolozsvar Cluj with a single employee He offered one third of his annual salary of 1000 Forints to hire a conservator Herman submitted a prepared abino skylark and a stuffed ermine accompanied by a letter of support from Kalman Chernel On 6 April 1864 Brassai announced that he hired an individual from Koszeg at his own expense 3 Herman s multifaceted scientific work and political engagement began with the period 1864 1872 in Kolozsvar He produced his first major scientific work here on the Eurasian hobby which was published in 1865 under the title Falco subbuteo Linne 4 He wrote a number of popular works in Kolozsvar for example The Art of the Spider appeared in the 1866 Kolozsvar Almanach Brassai and Herman had were almost identical in appearance both wearing shoulder length hair and long beards The striking exterior masked people who wanted to know and experience everything especially the life of animals in natural surroundings However the two scientists did not share the same character Brassai loved to spend time on the details while Herman sought out great generalizations delving into details only to support his arguments 5 Herman did not strive for popularity and despised those scientists who searched out unknown species to have their name remembered in the academic world Instead he tried to look for relationships and publish his experiences for the benefit ordinary people In order to enrich the collection of the Transylvanian Museum he performed several field trips for example to the Szekely region and the Transylvanian Plain As a result of his work the zoological collections was becoming more and more rich and notable He also collected minerals and is noted for his findings of syenite es a ditroite 3 6 Due to the growing domestic and international prestige was soon offered new challenges Carl Brunner invited him to Vienna to participate in a planned African zoological expedition to Cameroon The Hungarian Natural History Society thanks to the efforts of Kalman Szily and Janos Frivaldszky counter offered with a multi year scholarship to retain him Instead of the foreign trip Herman produced to great international acclaim a monograph on the domestic spider fauna in which he provided descriptions of 328 species of spiders including 36 new ones 7 8 He became an employee of the Hungarian National Museum in 1875 Here he was able to publish scientific works such as the above mentioned monograph on spiders which appeared in 1875 1877 and 1878 along with his own illustrations The three volume work was all the more popular abroad as the first and the second volumes were written in both Hungarian and German The third volume was written in Hungarian only with a German summary in the appendix The bilingualism of the work was of great importance since until then most scientific treatises were published in German These results allowed the Hungarian publications to be read abroad while serving to establish Hungarian as a language of scientific discourse 8 9 Legacy edit nbsp Otto Herman s holiday home in Lillafured HungaryHerman was the author of an enormous quantity of valuable scientific works totaling 5940 pages He published 14 books as well as 1140 articles and lectures He identified 36 new spider species Today many schools and institutions bear his name including one of the largest high schools in Miskolc the Otto Herman Gimnazium In 1953 the museum of Borsod Miskolc chose Otto Herman Museum as its name In 1960 the Hungarian Post issued a commemorative stamp in honour of the 125th anniversary of the birth of Otto Herman the stamp was designed by graphic artists Jozsef Vertel and Laszlo Kekesi The Otto Herman Medal was created in 1962 to recognize Hungarian karst and cave explorers In 1915 the Herman Otto cave west of Miskolc was named in tribute to the polymath scientist A lake bearing his name forms part of the Orfu lake system in Baranya county The Plant Protection Research Institute of the Academy is located in a street named after him in Budapest s II district A species of lace bug Lasiacantha hermani Vasarhelyi 1977 bears his name 10 His former home built in 1890 in Lillafured which he called Pele house was a tourist hut bearing his name and is now known as Otto Herman Memorial House It is now the home of two permanent exhibitions presenting the scientist s life as well as the wildlife of the Bukk Mountains In accordance with Herman s will his remains were moved from Budapest to Miskolc in 1965 and placed in the Hamori cemetery His tomb is marked by Miklos Varga s sculpture In remembrance of his accomplishment the Otto Herman National Biology competition is held biannually in Hungary The City Council of Miskolc has created the Otto Herman Scientific Award which is presented annually as part of a celebrations of the City of Miskolc The first honoree in 2001 was museum curator Laszlo Karpati The year 2014 marked the 100th anniversary of Herman s death the National Environment Institute organized Herman Otto Commemorative Year at the national level to honour the scientist and his work As part of the anniversary celebration the City Council of Miskolc posthumously awarded honorary citizenship to Herman Starting December 2014 Duna Television broadcast a four part documentary about the life of the scientist entitled Otto Herman the Last Hungarian Polymath References edit Hangay George 2008 Herman Otto In Capinera John L ed Encyclopedia of Entomology 2nd ed Dordrecht Springer pp 1792 1793 ISBN 9781402062421 Szathmary Louis I 1996 Otto Herman Much More Than a Chef In Walker Harlan ed Cooks amp Other People Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery 1995 Totnes England Prospect Books pp 259 265 ISBN 978 0907325727 a b Urak Istvan Herman Otto kolozsvari tevekenysege PDF in Hungarian adatbank transindex ro Retrieved 2014 01 22 Erdody Gabor Herman Otto Az atalakulasok vilagarol Valogatas Herman Otto termeszettudomanyos nyelveszeti es archeologiai irasaibol utoszo in Hungarian Budapest Neumann Kht 2005 Retrieved 2014 01 10 Lambrecht Kalman 1920 Herman Otto Az utolso magyar polihisztor elete es kora in Hungarian Budapest Biro Miklos Allodiatoris Irma 1975 A termeszettudos Herman Otto PDF in Hungarian HOM Evkonyv 7 13 Retrieved 2014 01 30 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Szekely Sandor 1955 Herman Otto in Hungarian Budapest Muvelt Nep Tudomanyos es Ismeretterjeszto Konyvkiado a b Hidegh Agnes 2003 Hermann Otto elete Herman Otto portal in Hungarian Retrieved 2014 01 10 Kiss Jozsef 2000 Herman Otto elete es munkassaga PDF in Hungarian Miskolc HOLOCEN Termeszetvedelmi egyesulet nyomdaja Archived from the original bibliografia PDF on 2014 02 04 Retrieved 2015 07 10 Lasiacantha hermani Vasarhelyi 1977 hemiptera databases org Retrieved 2014 02 03 External links edit nbsp Media related to Otto Herman at Wikimedia Commons The method for ornithophaenology inauguarated by the Hungarian Central Office of Ornithology 1905 Birds useful and birds harmful 1909 Works by Otto Herman at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Otto Herman at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Otto Herman amp oldid 1196699458, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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