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Beetles and humans
BEETLES AND HUMANS
A growth of learning and curiosity about
nature marked the Renaissance and the
Enlightenment, and by the late 1600s it became
more usual for educated, affluent people to have
cabinets of curiosities, the progenitors of museum
collections. In 1735 Linnaeus published Systema
Naturae, which provided a framework and system
HISTORY OF COLEOPTEROLOGY
The history of the study of Coleoptera dates at
least to the Classical period of ancient Greece
and Rome. Aristotle (384–322 bce) and his
teacher Plato both mentioned beetles, and many
of the generic names used by Carolus Linnaeus,
such as Buprestis and Cicindela, are from Naturalis
Historia by Pliny the Elder (23–79 ce), the largest
surviving book from the Roman Empire. After the
fall of Rome, Europe suffered an extended period
of comparatively little curiosity-driven academic
study, and during these Dark Ages, interest in
beetles was restricted to their uses or threats to
human health or food security, or to allegorical
or superstitious significance. During the Medieval
period, monastic texts repeated classical authors,
often with stylized images, and ascribed spurious
medical properties or even religious significance
to beetles.
above | Chiasognathus
grantii (Lucanidae)
Darwin’s Stag Beetle.
Charles Darwin,
during HMS Beagle’s
stop in Chile, was
among the first to
observe the behavior
of this beetle.
left | Batocera wallacei
(Cerambycidae:
Lamiinae) From New
Guinea, this is one of
the largest of its genus,
named after Alfred
Russel Wallace.