Onésime Clerc
Onésime Yegorowitsch Claire, also George Onésime Clerc (Russian: Онисим Егорович Клер; 25 February 1845 – 18 January 1920), was a Russian naturalist of Swiss origin.[1][2]
Life[]
Clerc was born in Corcelles[3] and graduated from the trade school in Neuchâtel.[4] The family circumstances did not allow him to study at university.
In 1862, Clerc emigrated to Russia and became a French home teacher with the Trubetskoy family in Moscow. After taking an exam at the Saint Petersburg Imperial University, he was allowed to teach French at educational institutions. After three years in Moscow, he worked in Yaroslavl, where he participated in the work of the local scientific society.
In 1867, Clerc became a French teacher at the boys' high school in Yekaterinburg, which opened in 1861. He explored the nature and sights in the vicinity of Yekaterinburg. The director of the high school and his colleagues as well as the director of the Yekaterinburg Mining School supported him. Soon he founded the Ural Society of Natural Science Lovers, whose secretary and later president he remained until his death, and the UOLJ Museum, which opened at the end of 1870 and later became the local history museum of Sverdlovsk Oblast.[1][5]
In 1870, Clerc married the daughter of a priest , with whom he had four children. The eldest son Vladimir studied at the University of Geneva and became a biologist. The second son Modeste became a geologist. The third son Georgi became a zoologist. The youngest child Kristiana became a French teacher in Shadrinsk.[1]
Clerc published geological and natural history works. He named botanical taxa. In the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants, his name appears in the form Clerc.[6] He was a member of more than 20 foreign and Russian scientific societies.
Clerc died on 18 January 1920 in Yekaterinburg.
The annual award for the best museum project in the Urals bears Clerc's name.[7] In 2015, the first Clerc monument in Russia was erected at the entrance to the local history museum in Yekaterinburg.[8]
Honors[]
Literature[]
- Pavel L. Gorchakovsky, Claude Favarger, Philippe Küpfer, Onésime Clerc (1845-1920), naturaliste: un neuchâtelois en Russie, in: Bulletin de la Société neuchâteloise des sciences naturelles, 118, 1995, p. 15-26. : ill (French).
- Rudolf Mumenthaler, Im Paradies der Gelehrten, 1996 (German).
References[]
- ^ a b c d Зорина, Л. И. (1989). Онисим Егорович Клер. Moscow: Nauka.
- ^ "Онисим Егорович Клер". Записки Уральского общества любителей естествознания (УОЛЕ) (39): III–IX. 1924.
- ^ de Coulon, Baptiste. "Dans quelle maison de Corcelles habitait Onésime Clerc (Они́сим Его́рович Клер), fondateur du Musée d'histoire naturelle d'Iekaterinbourg (Russie), en 1862?". Retrieved 22 November 2020.
- ^ "Clerc, Onésime". Retrieved 22 November 2020.
- ^ Корепанова, С. А. (2013). История Екатеринбурга в деятельности Уральского общества любителей естествознания. Издательство УМЦ УПИ. Yekaterinburg. ISBN 978-5-8295-0234-8.
- ^ "Clerc, George Onésime". The International Plant Names Index. Retrieved 22 November 2020.
- ^ "Актуальная информация". Retrieved 22 November 2020.
- ^ "В центре Екатеринбурга поставили памятник швейцарцу, который создал самый большой краеведческий музей Урала". Retrieved 22 November 2020.
- Russian language
- Russian naturalists
- Swiss botanists
- 19th-century Swiss botanists
- 20th-century Swiss botanists
- 1845 births
- 1920 deaths