XXXIV LIST OF AUTHORS 



from the East Indies, Gronovius most of the Virginian, 

 Gmelin all the Siberian, Burmann those of the Cape. 

 Naturalists vied with one another in enriching his collec- 

 tion, and in courting his society ; every academy in Eu- 

 rope enrolled him among its members. Thus honoured 

 at home, and respected abroad, Linne fulfilled for thirty- 

 seven years his professional duties, and died on the 10th 

 January 1778, at the ripe age of 71. Beneath the twin 

 towers of the Cathedral, a plain stone simply tells that it 

 covers ' ' Ossa Caroli a Linne ;" apart from this, a tablet 

 is erected " Botanicorum Principi ;" and in the museum 

 of his botanic garden a life-like statue presents him, 

 seated, holding in his hand the Linnaa borealis, in the 

 very act of lecturing. But better still than these out- 

 ward marks of respect, his memory is fondly cherished, 

 and his fame jealously guarded. Upsala has not for- 

 gotten, and will not forget, the most renowned of her 

 sons. 



LOGAN, R. F., of Duddingstone, near Edinburgh, a very active 

 Lepidopterist : papers in The Zoologist, and Trans. Ent. 

 Soc. Lond. 



MANN, Joseph, of Vienna, author of " Mikrolepidopternver- 

 zeichniss" in the Entom. Zeitung (1850), and of " Auf- 

 zahlung der Schmett. gesammelt auf einer Reise nach 

 Oberkrain und dem Kiistenlande " in Verh. des zool. bot. 

 Vereines in Wien (1854). 



MARSHAM, Thomas, was Secretary of the Linnsean Society in 

 1798, author of papers in the Transactions of that Soc., 

 and of "Entomologia Britannica, sistens Insecta Brit, 

 indigena" (London, 1802, Part I., Coleoptera), in which 

 last work a great number of new species of minute beetles 

 were for the first time, but not sufficiently, described. 

 His collection was purchased, after his death, by Mr. 

 Stephens, and is now in the British Museum cabinets, 

 his specimens being identified by a particular label. 



NATURFORSCHER. "Der Naturforscher, eine physikalische Wo- 

 ohenschrift," a Zoological Miscellany, published at Halle, 

 thirty vols., from 1774-1804, containing communica- 

 tions from a variety of authors Esper, Goetze, Hermann, 

 Luz, Panzer, Schaller, Schrank, Schreber, and others. 



NEWMAN, Edward, F.L.S., F.Z.S., M. Imp. L.C. Acad., late 

 Pres, Entom. Soc. London, author of " The Grammar of 

 Entomology" (1835), "A Familiar Introduction to the 

 History of Insects" (1841), "Entomological Notes" in 

 the Entom. Magazine and The Entomologist, &c., and of 

 some well-known botanical works. Mr. Newman is the 



