Alexander von Humboldt: A Concise Biography
By (Author) Andreas W. Daum
Translated by Robert Savage
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
1st March 2025
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Biography: adventurers and explorers
History of science
304.2092
Hardback
224
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
An engaging account of the life and work of the legendary polymath Alexander von Humboldt
In this lucid biography, Andreas Daum offers a succinct and novel intrepretation of the life and oeuvre of Alexander von Humboldt (17691859). A Prussian nobleman born into the age of European Enlightenment, Humboldt was a contemporary of Napoleon, Simn Bolvar, and Charles Darwin. As a naturalist and scholar, he traveled the world, from the Americas to Central Asia, and recorded his observations in multiple volumes. Humboldt is still admired today for his interdisciplinary outreach and ecological awareness.
Moving beyond the conventional views of Humboldt as either intellectual superhero or gentleman colonizer, Daums account presents a novel interpretation. His incisive account focuses on Humboldt in the context of the tumultuous period of history in which he lived. Humboldt embodied the contradictions that marked the age of Atlantic Revolutions. He became a critic of slavery and embraced the emerging civil society but remained close to authoritarian rulers. He dedicated his life to scientific research yet was driven by emotional impulses and pleaded for an aesthetic appreciation of nature. Daum introduces a man passionately striving to establish a cosmic understanding of nature while grappling with the eras explosion of knowledge.
This book provides the first concise biography of Humboldt, covering all periods of his life, exploring his personality, the vast range of his works, and his intellectual networks. Daum helps us understand Humboldt as a seminal historical figure and illuminates the role of science at the dawn of the global world.
Andreas Daum is professor of history at the State University of New York (SUNY) at Buffalo and a recipient of the Humboldt Research Award. He is the author of Kennedy in Berlin, migrs from Nazi Germany as Historians, and Popularizing Science in the Nineteenth Century (in German), among others.