Theodor Kleinschmidt
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Theodor Kleinschmidt (6 March 1834 in Wolfhagen – 10 April 1881 in Utuaia, Bismarck Archipelago) was a German trader, explorer and naturalist.
Biography
Kleinschmidt studied commerce and went to the United States of America in 1843. He launched out in business in Saint Louis (Missouri) but went bankrupt and had to leave for Australia then on to Fiji to flee his creditors. But his trade with the natives was not brilliant, in particular because of the economic crisis of 1874. The Museum Godeffroy of Hamburg then offered a new opportunity to him. The institution charged him with collecting natural history specimens, fauna and flora, in the Solomon Islands and New Hebrides, territories largely unexplored hitherto. He was assassinated by natives in 1881. He was the uncle of the priest and ornithologist Otto Kleinschmidt (1870–1954).
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Eponym
The pink-billed parrotfinch (Erythrura kleinschmidti) was named in his honour by Otto Finsch.
References
Literature
- Walther Killy (Hersg.): Enzyklopädie der Biographien. Saur Verlag, München, 2000
- Articles lacking sources from October 2021
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- 1834 births
- 1881 deaths
- People from Wolfhagen
- German naturalists
- Emigrants from the Electorate of Hesse
- Immigrants to the United States
- Immigrants to colonial Australia
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