Affiliation:
1. University of Durham, Department of Philosophy, Durham, DH1 3JP.
Abstract
In 1779 Revd Dr John Walker was appointed to be the University of Edinburgh's Professor of Natural History. Because of the institutional structure of the university, he took care to keep detailed class lists from 1782 to 1800. These are extant in the University of Edinburgh's Special Collections Department. As many of the students on the lists would go on to have a profound impact on the practice of nineteenth century natural history, I have compiled them into a table so that they can be used as a reference tool for those interested in the study of natural history in Edinburgh during the late eighteenth century. The table is arranged into columns that state the student's name, degree, year of attendance and geographic origin. To help the reader better understand the table, I have written a brief introductory essay that addresses Walker's organisation of the course and the types of students who attended the lectures. It also identifies the prominent role played by chemistry in Edinburgh's natural history community and discusses the foundation of the Student Natural History Society of Edinburgh.
Publisher
Edinburgh University Press
Subject
Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),History,Anthropology
Reference52 articles.
1. James Edward Smith and the Natural History Society of Edinburgh
2. ALLEN, D. E., 1987 The natural history society in Britain through the years. Archives of natural history 14: 243-259.
3. ARNOT, H., 1816 The history of Edinburgh, from earliest accounts to 1780 with appendix. Edinburgh: Thomas Turnbull. Pp xvi, 598.
4. BERGMAN, T. 1785 A dissertation on elective attractions. Translated from the Latin by the translator of Spallanzani's dissertations. Translation by Thomas Beddoes. London: J. Murray. Pp xiv, 38200.
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