首页> 外文期刊>Amphibia-reptilia: Publication of the Societas Europaea Herpetologica >The oldest herpetological collection in the world: the surviving amphibian and reptile specimens of the Museum of Ulisse Aldrovandi
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The oldest herpetological collection in the world: the surviving amphibian and reptile specimens of the Museum of Ulisse Aldrovandi

机译:世界上最古老的爬行动物收藏:Ulisse Aldrovandi博物馆幸存的两栖和爬行动物标本

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The natural history collection of the Bolognese polymath, encyclopedist, and natural philosopher Ulisse Aldrovandi (1522-1605) is regarded as the first museum in the modern sense of the term. It was intended as a resource for scholarship and a microcosm of the natural world, not simply a cabinet of curiosities. In addition to physical specimens, Aldrovandi's zoological material included a large series of paintings of animals (Tavole di Animali) that were integral to the collection. Following Aldrovandi's death, his collection was maintained by the terms of his will, but by the 19th century relatively little remained. We examined surviving herpetological components of the collection, comprising 19 specimens of ten species, as well as the corresponding paintings and associated archival material in the Museum of Palazzo Poggi, Museo di Zoologia, and Biblioteca Universitaria Bolognese in Bologna, Italy. Although the antiquity of some of these dried preparations is in question, many are documented in the Tavole di Animali and/or are mentioned in 17th century lists of the museum, verifying them as the oldest museum specimens of amphibians and reptiles in the world. Exotic species are best represented, including two specimens of Uromastyx aegyptia and several boid snakes - the first New World reptiles to be displayed in Europe. However, the Tavole di Animali suggest that the original collection was dominated by Italian taxa and that greater effort may have been made to conserve the more spectacular specimens. The Aldrovandi collection provides a tangible link to the dawn of modem herpetology in Renaissance Italy.
机译:博洛涅塞博物学家,自然学家和自然哲学家乌里斯·阿尔德罗万迪(Ulisse Aldrovandi,1522-1605年)的自然历史收藏被视为现代意义上的第一座博物馆。它旨在作为学术研究的资源和自然世界的缩影,而不仅仅是好奇心。除了物理标本之外,Aldrovandi的动物学材料还包括大量动物绘画作品(Tavole di Animali),这些绘画作品是该收藏中不可或缺的。阿尔德罗万迪(Aldrovandi)死后,按照他的遗嘱保留了他的收藏,但到了19世纪,留下的收藏很少。我们检查了该集合中尚存的爬虫学成分,包括十种物种的19个标本,以及位于意大利博洛尼亚的博洛宫博物馆,动物学博物馆和博洛尼亚大学图书馆的相应绘画和相关档案材料。尽管其中一些干燥制剂的古代问题尚存疑问,但许多动物都记录在动物动物杂志上和/或在博物馆的17世纪名录中被提及,从而证明它们是世界上最古老的两栖动物和爬行动物标本。最具代表性的是外来物种,包括两个Uromastyx埃及标本和几条蛇形蛇-这是在欧洲展示的第一批新世界爬行动物。但是,动物杂志(Tavole di Animali)表示,原始收藏主要由意大利的分类单元组成,并且可能已做出更大的努力来保存更壮观的标本。 Aldrovandi系列为意大利文艺复兴时期现代爬虫学的兴起提供了切实的联系。

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