Ignacio Bolívar Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Most Excellent
Ignacio Bolívar
Birth Name:Ignacio Bolívar y Urrutia
Birth Date:9 November 1850
Birth Place:Madrid, Spain
Death Place:Mexico City, Mexico
Children:Cándido Bolívar Pieltain
Module:
Embed:yes
Office:Seat F of the Real Academia Española
Term Start:18 January 1931
Term End:19 November 1944

Ignacio Bolívar y Urrutia (pronounced as /es/; 9 November 1850 – 19 November 1944) was a Spanish naturalist and entomologist, and one of the founding fathers of Spanish entomology. He helped found the Real Sociedad Española de Historia Natural (Royal Spanish Natural History Society) in 1871, and was the author of several books and of over 1000 species.

He also encouraged other naturalists to study entomology, José María de la Fuente being one example. In this field he wrote more than 300 books and monographs and described more than thousand new species and about 200 genera.

After the Spanish Civil War he was exiled to Mexico when the nationalist government harshly repressed Republican militants and sympathisers. Here he was made Doctor honoris of the National Autonomous University of Mexico. In Mexico he was devoted mainly to entomology and founded in 1940 the journal Ciencia (Science).

His more important works include: Ortópteros de España nuevos o poco conocidos (1873) and Catálogo sinóptico de los ortópteros de la fauna ibérica (1900).[1]

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ignacio Bolívar - letra F. Real Academia Española. 27 May 2023. es.