Biographical dictionary

The Biographical Dictionary of British Coleopterists is compiled and maintained by Michael Darby. The Dictionary can be accessed below, and see also the additional information provide by Michael:

Michael would be pleased to hear from anyone wishing to make corrections or alterations to the Dictionary, which will be fully acknowledged. Email Michael Darby or write to Michael at 33 Bedwin Street, SALISBURY, Wiltshire, SP1 3UT.

The filter boxes below can be used to find individual entries or groups of entries in the table. You can filter by surname (enter a single letter to see all names beginning with that letter, or enter the first part of a particular surname), or by any part of the full name, or you can filter the main biographical text. You can use the filters in combination, e.g. to search for both a name and some biography text at the same time. Don't forget to click on the Apply button to make your filter work. To remove your filter, delete the text you typed in and then click "Apply" again.

Type in the first letter/s of the surname
Type in any part of the name
Type in any text
Namesort descending Dates Biography
BOWRING, John Charles 24 March 1821-20 June 1893

Born into a large family of textile merchants long established in Devonshire. He was the eldest of eight children of Sir John Bowring, the politician. There is no information about his upbringing, but by the spring of 1842 he was engaged as a businessman in Hong Kong, where he must have been one of the first British residents. By 1848, and perhaps earlier, he was working for the well-known firm of Jardine, Matheson, and Company, and by 1854 when his father was appointed Governor of Hong Kong, he became a full partner in the company. Bowring remained in Hong Kong until 1864, when he returned to England a rich man at the age of 43. He married in 1863 and after his first wife's death, again in 1866. By his second wife he had seven sons and one daughter. He was a J.P. for Devon, became Freeman of the city of Exeter in 1866, before moving to an estate in Windsor Forest, Forest Farm, where he died.

Bowring appears to have collected insects from the time he first arrived in China. By 1848 he is recorded to have possessed upwards of 600 species of Coleoptera largely from the Hong Kong and Macao districts, and by 1855 this number had grown to some 1,300. He became a friend of J.G. Champion when the latter was resident in Hong Kong during the years 1847-50, and the two often collected together and exchanged specimens. W.W. Fowler in his introductory volume to the FBI notes that Bowring also collected at Dacca in Bengal.

As early as 1844 he was sending specimens to the British Museum, and he continued this practice until 1863, when anticipating retirement, he presented his entire collection to that institution. Troyer notes that no two sources agree about the number of specimens involved estimates varying from 84,240 to 230,000. F. Smith, Proc.ESL., 1864, 196-216, notes that the collection was housed in 400 cabinet drawers. Similarly, there is disagreement about the names of the collectors from whom Bowring acquired specimens. The total of references adds up to the following: Frederick Bates, Brettingham, Curtis, L.A.A. Chevrolat (Longicornia), Robert Fortune, Henri Jekel (1857, Rhyncophora), M. Mouhot, F.J.S. Parry (Anthribidae), T. Tatum (Geodephaga) and Alfred Russel Wallace. All sources agree in mentioning the collections of Chevrolat, Jekel and Tatum. Apart from the specimens in the NHM I have also seen beetles bearing Bowring's labels in the collection of the Albert Memorial Museum Exeter.

Westwood described Bowring, as 'our indefatigable Corresponding Member [of the FES]', but inspite of his prowess as a writer of letters, some of which were published by their recipients, he published only few articles himself. Of these his notes on parasitism of the firefly Fulgora were the most important for they were the first record of parasitic Lepidoptera. Although Bowring is recorded to have kept a journal in which he noted names for new species, most of his captures were named for him by others. It is not surprising, therefore, that between 1844 and 1939 a total of forty five species and two varieties were established with the epithets bowringi or bowringii. Bowring also devoted a considerable amount of time to botanical studies, he formed large collections of plants and several species are named after him.

There is an excellent article on Bowring by James Troyer in Archives of Natural History, (1982),10(3), 515-529, which includes a list of Bowring's publications, and from which much of the above is taken.

 FES (1847), FLS (1876). (MD 10/01)

BOYCE, Peter R. (b. 20 June 1931) Diptera specialist who also worked on Coleoptera. Lived at Chesham, Buckinghamshire. (MD 3/03)
BOYS, W.J.E.

A Captain in the army. Recorded in various volumes of the FBI series as having collected Coleoptera in that country. The species Paussus boysi Westwood (1845) and Rhysodes boysi Arrow (1901) are named after him. Smith (1986) notes that Boys sent insects to Hope in 1842, now in the HDO, together with a letter. The HDO also has a cabinet of insects other than Coleoptera purchased by Westwood in 1848, and paintings and transfers of Indian insects and the manuscript of his paper on Mutilla read to the ESL, June 1843. FES 1842-43. (MD 10/01)

BRACKENBURY, Austin 19 August 1925 - 18 January 2016

Donated over 4,000 insects, including many Coleoptera collected in Derbyshire and South Yorkshire from 1975 to 1981, to Sheffield Museum. (Information from Steven Garland). (MD 12/01)

BRADBURY, C.

Published 'A beetle parasitic in wasp's nests', Ent, 6, 1872, 2-3. (MD 12/01)

BRADLEY, J.

Listed in the Ent.Ann., 1860, 6, as interested in British Lepidoptera and Coleoptera. At that time he lived at 23 Richmond Street, Preston. (MD 12/01)

BRAIKENRIDGE, George Weare

A Reverend. Listed in the Ent.Ann., 1860, 6, as interested in British Lepidoptera and Coleoptera. He was FLS and FZS and gave his addresses as Broomwell House, Brislington, near Bath, and Clevedon, near Bristol. (MD 12/01)

BRAINE, W. Recorded by G.J.Arrow, FBI,Lamellicornia, Rutelinae, etc., 1917, as having collected Rutelinae near Colombo, Ceylon. (MD 12/01)
BRAUER, Richard

A doctor. Listed in Naturalists Directory, 1904-5, as interested in Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Orthoptera and marine zoology. At this time he lived at St. John's Road, Knutsford, Cheshire. In the 1906-7 edition of this periodical his name does not occur.

There is a collection of some 484 specimens of exotic Rhyncophora in Bolton Museum, collected by Bauer in 1905(?), which was purchased from A. Ford for £2-10s (Accession no. 128.05). A collection of exotic Lepidoptera collected by Bauer was sold by Stevens on 14 November 1905. (MD 12/01)

BRAZIER, J.W. Ashley Kirk-Spriggs tells me there are beetles collected by Brazier in the New Hebrides in the Rippon collection, NMW. (MD 12/01)

Pages