Peter Carl Ludwig Schwarz
Peter Carl Ludwig Schwarz | |
---|---|
Born | Danzig-Gdańsk | 4 June 1822
Died | 29 September 1894 St. George's? | (aged 72)
Awards | Konstantin Gold Medal Demidov Prize (1865) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | astronomy, geodesy |
Institutions | Imperial University of Dorpat |
Peter Carl Ludwig Schwarz[1] (Julian, O.S.: 23 May 1822,[1] Danzig-Gdańsk – 17 September 1894; Gregorian, N.S.: 4 June 1822 - 29 September 1894,[2] St. George's?; Buried: Tartu)[1] (referred to mostly as Ludwig Schwarz),[2] was a Baltic German astronomer[3] of Imperial Russia, explorer, and professor[1] of astronomy at the University of Dorpat[4] honored with the Konstantin Medal[note 1] of the Imperial Russian Geographical Society.[5] Schwarz also was a recipient of the Demidov Prize[5][note 2] of the Academy of Sciences of St. Petersburg in 1865 for his work in geodesy.[5]
Palaeoarctic Siberian Asia Expeditions
[edit]Following assignment by Friedrich Georg Wilhelm Struve as a field expedition astronomer (1849-1853) to study the Amur River,[5][3] astronomer Schwarz led (1854-1862) the East Siberian Expedition of 1855 which extensively explored unknown and unmapped territory in Eastern Siberia, such as the Turan Range and the North Baikal Highlands.[6][5]
The Siberian expedition went into central Asia, southeastern Asia, and northern China.[5] Some of the routes travelled were as long as 10,000 miles.[5] Utilizing his prior Amur field knowledge of astronomy he would determine geographical positions of certain points (geodesy) for preparation of geographical maps.[5] The information would later be used in planning the construction of the Trans-Siberian Railway systems and others in southeast Asia.
The volumes reporting the results of the expedition were published in 1864.[5] The separate tomes concerning the vegetation and wildlife reports were prepared by the expedition's botanist and zoologist Gustav Radde.
Dorpat Observatory
[edit]Ludwig Schwarz served as the Director of Dorpat Observatory[2] (now Tartu Observatory) from 1872[7][note 3] to 1891,[2] succeeding Thomas Clausen who held the position from 1866 to 1872.[7] Upon the retirement of Schwarz from the directorship on 1 September 1891 the position became the responsibility of Grigori Levitski who held it until 1908.[8]
During his tenure in later life he conducted studies of one third of the 10,000 celestial stars visible at Tartu.[5]
Legacy
[edit]Radde's warbler, a leaf warbler bird that breeds in Siberia and winters in southeast Asia, bears a scientific name (Phylloscopus schwarzi) that commemorates Schwarz.[9] The bird was described in 1863 by naturalist and fellow explorer Gustav Radde who served in the East Siberian Expedition of 1855 led by Schwarz.[9]
Gallery
[edit]-
Dorpat Observatory. Painting by August Matthias Hagen, father-in-law to Schwarz.
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Radde's Warbler (Phylloscopus schwarzi)
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Ludwig Schwarz, 1870.
Painting by Julie Wilhelmine Hagen-Schwarz, his wife.
Works
[edit]His publications include:
German:
- Schwarz, Ludwig (1889); Eine Studie auf dem Gebiete der Practischen Astronomie; Dorpat.[10]
- [English: A Study in the Field of Practical Astronomy].
- Schwarz, Ludwig (1887-1893); Beobachtungen, angestellt und herausgegeben von Ludwig Schwarz, Band 17-20; Kaiserliche Universitats-Sternwarte, Dorpat (Jurjew)[11][12]
- [English: Observations made and published from Ludwig Schwarz, Volumes 17-20; Imperial University Observatory].
See also
[edit]- List of astronomers
- List of Russian astronomers and astrophysicists
- List of Russian explorers
- History of Siberia
- Russian conquest of Siberia
Notes
[edit]- ^ The Konstantin Medal is named after Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich of Russia, the first chairman of the Russian Geographical Society.
- ^ The Demidov Medal/Demidov Prize was an influencing forerunner to the Nobel Prize.
- ^ EMWS issue (1894), p. 317: Scientific News, shows incorrectly 1874.
Citations
[edit]- ^ a b c d Siilivask (1985), p. 119.
- ^ a b c d Observatory (1894), p. 376.
- ^ a b Amur catalog entry of 2 maps.
- ^ Outlook (1894), p. 775.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Tartu Observatory profile re Schwarz, website.
- ^ Kropotkin, p. 563.
- ^ a b Mollin (2011), p. 162, Biography 4.8, Thomas Clausen (1801-1885).
- ^ Tartu Observatory profiles, website.
- ^ a b Raade (1863), p. 260.
- ^ PASP (1891), p. 330
- ^ SCTLRAS (1900), p. 44.
- ^ MNRAS (1888), Appendix IV, p. 82.
References
[edit]Books
[edit]English:
- Great Britain, India Office (1878), A Catalogue of Manuscript and Printed Reports, Field Books, Memoirs, Maps, etc., of the Indian Surveys, Deposited in the Map Room of the India Office. See Amur map catalogue entry appearing in the Asiatic Russia section, p. 511.
- Mollin, Richard A. (2011), Algebraic Number Theory, Second Edition, CRC Press, ISBN 978-1-4398-4599-8 (ebook).
- SCTLRAS (1900), Supplementary Catalogue of The Library of the Royal Astronomical Society, June 1884 – 1898, Royal Astronomical Society, Burlington House, London; Spottiswoode & Co., London (publisher).
- Siilivask, Karl (1985), History of Tartu University: 1632-1982, Perioodika. This reference uses "(1822-1894)" at p. 119.
German:
- Raade, Gustav (1863), Reisen im Suden von Ost-Sibirien in den Jahren 1855-59, Russian Geographical Society.
- 2 volumes: I. Die Saugethierfauna , 1862; II. Die Festlands-Ornis , 1864. From volume 2, p. 260, plate 9, figs. 1a, 1b, 1c (1863).
- [English: Travel to the South of Eastern Siberia in the Years 1855-59: I. The Wildland Animal Fauna, 1862; II. The Mainland-Birds, 1864].
- Collectively referred to as Reisen im Suden Ost-Sibiriens [English: Travel to the South East Siberians].
- 2 volumes: I. Die Saugethierfauna , 1862; II. Die Festlands-Ornis , 1864. From volume 2, p. 260, plate 9, figs. 1a, 1b, 1c (1863).
Journals
[edit]English:
- EMWS "Scientific News". English Mechanic and World of Science. 60 (1548): 317. 1894., 23 November 1894.
- Kropotkin (1903), (Prince) Pyotr Alexeyevich; and Freshfield, Douglas W., "Obituary. Dr. Gustav Radde." The Geographical Journal, Vol. 21, No. 5 (May, 1903), pp. 563–565. The Royal Geographical Society (publisher).
- MNRAS (1888), Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 48 (1887-1888), Burlington House, London; Spottiswoode & Co., London (publisher); entry as: Dorpat, Kaiserliche Universitats-Sternwarte, Band xvii. Angestellt und herausgegeben von Ludwig Schwarz.
- Observatory, Editor (1894), The Observatory: A Review of Astronomy, vol. 17, The Royal Astronomical Society, p. 376
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has generic name (help). November 1894 issue. United Kingdom. - Outlook, "October Necrology". The Outlook. 50: 775. 1894., 10 November 1894 issue, necrology entry for October 3.
- PASP, "Unbound books and pamphlets". Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. 3 (18). Astronomical Society of the Pacific: 330. 1891. Bibcode:1891PASP....3..320.. doi:10.1086/120346. S2CID 250814450., San Francisco, USA.
Maps
[edit]Russian:
- Amur Region, 1861.
- Amur Region, 1864.
- [English: Amur catalog entry of 2 Russian maps appears in the Great Britain, India Office (1878) book at p. 511 in the section "Asiatic Russia" [noted above] as: "The Amur. KAPTA Map of the Region of the AMUR with the upper parts of the Lena and Yenisei and the Island of Saghalin Constructed from the observation of the Siberian expedition of the Imperial Russian Geographical Society by Ludwig Schwarz astronomer to the expedition St Petersburg 1861 In Russian Scale 1 1,680,000 or about 27 miles to 1 inch on 7 sheets in a cover size of each 25 inches by 31. Another edition dated 1864."]
External links
[edit]- 1822 births
- 1894 deaths
- Scientists from Gdańsk
- 19th-century German explorers
- 19th-century German geographers
- 19th-century German astronomers
- Astronomers from the Russian Empire
- 19th-century explorers from the Russian Empire
- Geographers from the Russian Empire
- Full members of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences
- University of Tartu alumni
- Academic staff of the University of Tartu
- Baltic-German people from the Russian Empire
- Explorers of Asia
- Explorers of Central Asia
- Explorers of Siberia
- Demidov Prize laureates