Andrej Kmeť
Andrej Kmeť (November 19, 1841, Szénásfalu, Austrian Empire (today Bzenica, Slovakia) - February 16, 1908, Turócszentmárton (today Martin, Slovakia)) was a Slovak botanist, ethnographer, archaeologist, and geologist.[1] He identified several new species of plants and created a herbarium with 72,000 specimens. He was one of the first researchers who carried on modern archaeological excavations in Central Europe. In 1892, he founded the Slovak Learned Society (Slovak: Slovenská učená spoločnosť), which later became nucleus of the Slovak Academy of Sciences. He was also known for his bitter criticism of alcoholism. Andrej Kmeť was interred in the National Cemetery in Martin.
Works online[]
- Sitno a co s neho vidieť. Ružomberok: Fr. Rich. Osvald, 1901. 140 p. - available at ULB Digital Library
References[]
- ^ "Andrej Kmeť" Osobnosti. Retrieved 2015-08-20.
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Andrej Kmeť. |
- Biography of Andrej Kmeť (in Slovak)
- Andrej Kmeť Museum (in Slovak)
Categories:
- 1841 births
- 1908 deaths
- People from Žiar nad Hronom District
- Slovak scientists
- Slovak botanists
- Slovak Roman Catholic priests
- Burials at National Cemetery in Martin
- 19th-century Roman Catholic priests
- Slovak people stubs