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Prideaux John Selby

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Nationality
  
British

Name
  
Prideaux Selby

Role
  
Botanist


Prideaux John Selby

Born
  
23 July 1788 Alnwick, Northumberland, England (
1788-07-23
)

Occupation
  
ornithologist, botanist, artist

Died
  
March 27, 1867, Bamburgh, United Kingdom

Education
  
University College, Oxford

People also search for
  
Charles Darwin, William Bernhardt Tegetmeier, Andrew Crichton, Osulf I of Bamburgh

Books
  
Illustrations of British Ornithology, The natural history of pigeons, A History of British Forest‑tre, Pigeon Classics Volume 2

Prideaux John Selby (23 July 1788 – 27 March 1867) was an English ornithologist, botanist and natural history artist.

Contents

Life

Selby was born at Alnwick in Northumberland, a son of the Beal and Twizell House, Northumberland branch of the Selby family. He studied at University College, Oxford. He succeeded in 1804 to the family estates at Beal, and added to the landholdings there at a cost of some £14000 in about 1840. He sold the Beal estate amounting to 1,450 acres (590 ha) in 1850 for £47000 (£4,533,000 at today's prices).

He married Lewis Tabitha Mitford and they had three daughters. He died at Twizell House and was buried in Bamburgh churchyard.

Work

Selby is best known for his Illustrations of British Ornithology (1821–1834), the first set of life-sized illustrations of British birds. He also wrote Illustrations of Ornithology with William Jardine and A History of British Forest-trees (1842).

Many of the illustrations in his works were drawn from specimens in his collection. In addition to the above works he contributed to Jardine's Naturalist's Library the volumes on the pigeons (1835) and the parrots (1836), the latter illustrated by Edward Lear. He was for some time one of the editors of the Magazine of Zoology and Botany.

His collections were sold in 1885 and became dispersed. The South African birds collected by Andrew Smith went to the Zoology Museum of the University of Cambridge.

References

Prideaux John Selby Wikipedia


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