02742cz a2200313n 4500
no2001076068
DLC
20150906094903.0
010924n| azannaabn |a aaa c
no2001076068
(OCoLC)oca05589242
DSI
eng
rda
DSI
DLC
IEN
17941120
18841210
Rüppell, Eduard,
1794-1884
Frankfurt am Main (Germany)
Frankfurt am Main (Germany)
Germany
Ethiopia
Sudan
Egypt
naf
Naturalists
Explorers
lcsh
male
ger
lat
Rueppell, Eduard,
1794-1884
Rüppell, Edouard,
1794-1884
Rüppell, Eduardus,
1794-1884
Rüppell, Wilhelm Peter Eduard Simon,
1794-1884
Atlas zu der Reise im nördlichen Afrika, 1826-1831:
t.p. (Eduard Rüppell)
Novae species algarum, 1837:
t.p. (Eduardus Rüppell)
NUC pre-56
(Rüppell, Eduard, 1794-1884; full name: Rüppell, Wilhelm Peter Eduard Simon)
OCLC, Sept. 24, 2001
(hdgs.: Rüppell, Eduard, 1794-1884; Rüppell, Wilhelm Peter Eduard Simon, 1794-1884; usage: Eduard Rüppell; Eduardus Rüppell)
Journal des voyages, ou Archives géographiques du XIXe siècle. 74e cahier, Déc. 1824. I. Mémoires et notices. Notice sur Méhemet-Beg, et sa carte du Kordoufan, 1824:
title page (page 265) (M. Edouard Rüppell; traveler, article extracted from his letter sent from Ambukol [Sudan])
Wikipedia, Aug. 27, 2015
(Eduard Rüppell; Wilhelm Peter Eduard Simon Rüppell; b. Frankfurt-am-Main, Nov. 20, 1794; d. Dec. 10, 1884; surname sometimes transliterated to Rueppell; visited Sinai in 1817, developed interest in natural history; attended lectures at University of Pavia and University of Genoa in botany and zoology; his first expedition was in 1821, accompanied by surgeon Michael Hey, through the Sinai desert; in 1822 they were the first European explorers to reach the Gulf of Aqaba; in 1823 they traveled up the Nile to Nubia, collecting specimens; started through Ethiopia, stopped by ill health; Rüppell returned to Europe in 1827; in 1830 he returned to Africa, became first naturalist to traverse Ethiopia; several species named after him; published travel account, Travels in Abyssinia)
Encyclopaedia Britannica online, Aug. 26, 2015
(Eduard Rüppell; Wilhelm Peter Eduard Simon Rüppell; died Frankfurt-am-Main; first expedition 1822-28, crossing the Sudan from the Nubian Desert south to Kordofan; second expedition 1831-34, crossing Ethiopia from east to west by way of the ruins of Aksum; amassed ancient Ethiopian manuscripts during a stay in Gonder on his return trip)