Oskar Engelhard von Löwis of Menar (5 April 1838–6 August 1899) was a Baltic German ornithologist.
Life and work
editHe was born in present-day Valmiera District, Latvia (then part of the Russian Empire). He studied physics and economy in Tartu and worked as a public official in different capacities. An avid hunter and ornithologist, he was a member of the Riga Association of Natural Scientists (Der Naturforscherverein zu Riga), predecessor of the Natural History Museum of Latvia from 1878. He contributed to several publications on the bird-life in Latvia, and wrote three books on the subject. Among these is the first book about birds in the Latvian language.[1][2]
Selected works
edit- Die Reptilien Kur-, Liv- und Estlands: ein Handbüchlein für alle Naturfreunde in Stadt und Land. Riga: N. Kymmel's Buchhandlung, 1884
- Ievērojamākie Baltijas putni. Rīga: Ernsts Plates, 1893 (in Latvian)
- Unsere Baltischen Singvögel. Reval: Franz Kluge, 1895
- Diebe und Käuber in der Baltischen Vogelwelt. Riga: Deubner, 1898
References
edit- ^ "Löwis of Menar, Oskar Engelhard v." Baltisches Biographisches Lexikon digital (in German). Baltischen Historischen Kommission. Retrieved 7 June 2015.
- ^ Matrozis; Ruslan. "2008. gads Latvijas ornitoloģijas vēsturē – nozīmīgi notikumi un jubilejas" (in Latvian). Putni Latvijā un pausalē. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 7 June 2015.