Daniel Solander
By (Author) Edward Duyker
By (author) Per Tingbrand
Melbourne University Press
The Miegunyah Press
1st May 1995
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Maritime history
508.092
Paperback
524
Width 157mm, Height 240mm, Spine 38mm
704g
Some 180 letters written either by or to the Swedish naturalist and pioneer are reproduced here. Daniel Solander, the eighteenth-century Swedish naturalist and traveller, was a pioneer of the scientific study of natural history and one of the earliest collectors in New Holland. For many years a colleague of Joseph Banks, he sailed to the Pacific with Banks and James Cook in the Endeavour in 1768. With Banks, he described and classified more than one thousand new species. Solander's letters offer important insights into some of the foremost scientific issues of the day and his close association with such remarkable men as Carl Linnaeus, Banks, John Ellis and William Hunter. The letters give little hint that English was not his native tongue. His warm and relaxed style reveals considerable linguistic ability and explains why the novelist Fanny Burney fondly called him a 'philosophical gossip' and why James Boswell declared, 'Throw him where you will, he swims'. This collection is based on international research. Some 180 letters written either by or to Solander were located and copied and appear in their original language.
Edward Duyker was born in Melbourne to a Dutch father and a Mauritian mother. After working as an intelligence analyst with the Department of Defence and teaching at Griffith University he settled in Sydney in 1984 as a full-time writer. Per Tingbrand is the author of several publications on Solander and has travelled extensively, often under sail.