Hendrik van Rijgersma
Hendrik Elingsz van Rijgersma (born 5 January 1835 in
ichthyologist
.
Biography
Rijgersma became a physician in 1858, and practiced medicine in the small town of
Jisp and on the island of Marken
. In 1861 he married Maria Henriette Gräfing; they had seven children.
When slavery was abolished in the
Dutch colonies in 1863, he was one of six physicians appointed to provide medical care to the liberated slaves on the island of St. Martin in the Netherlands Antilles
, where he served as government physician until his untimely death at the age of 42. There he collected many fossils, plants, birds, reptiles, fishes, mollusks, crustaceans and insects.
Hendrik van Rijgersma was an excellent painter and left to posterity many, mostly unpublished, drawings, sketches and water colors of plants, shells and other subjects.
His animal collections were sent by him to the
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia
, of which he was a corresponding member.
The plants he sent to the Leyden. In the Swedish Museum of Natural History
, there are 129 plants collected by van Rijgersma, of which 74 have illustrations.
A species of snake, Alsophis rijgersmaei, is named in his honor.[1]
Works by and about Rijgersma
References
- ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Rijgersma", p. 222).
Sources
- Biography by Mia Ehn, Swedish Museum of Natural History
- Ehn, Mia & Zanoni, T. A. The herbarium and botanical art of Hendrik Elingsz van Rijgersma, Taxon 51: 513–520, 2002.
External links