23,182
edits
Changes
Bot: Automated import of articles *** existing text overwritten ***
'''Enrico Hillyer Giglioli'''
{{Infobox rai-fellow
| first_name = Enrico Hillyer
=== House Notes ===
have combined two - hope same [sometimes spelled Giglio]<br />ASL proposed 1866.09.05 as local secretary for Japan<br />1892.11.08 proposed for Hon. Membership<br />death noted in report of the council for 1909: Professor Giglioli, the well-known ethnologist and collector of stone implements, died on Deceinber 16th. He was born in London in 1845, and eventually became Professor first at Pisa, and subsequently at Florence. Hle was elected an honorary fellow in 1892, and his loss will be greatly felt by ethnographers in this country, especially by those who knew his genial character.
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
Enrico Hillyer Giglioli (June 13, 1845 – December 16, 1909) was an Italian zoologist and anthropologist.<br />Giglioli was born in London and first studied there. He obtained a degree in science at the University of Pisa in 1864 and started to teach zoology in Florence in 1869. Marine vertebrates, and invertebrates, were his academic interest but he was a noted amateur ornithologist and photographer. <br />Giglioli was director of the Royal Zoological Museum in Florence, Italy. He wrote up the zoology of the voyage of the corvette Magenta on which he had taken over from Filippo de Filippi. Professor De Filippi died in Hong Kong in 1867.He was also involved in the activities of the Florence School of Anthropology and through this developed an interest in ethnography. <br />Giglioli's Whale is an unrecognized species of whale observed by Giglioli from Magenta. Magenta was a warship of the Italian Royal Navy. The voyage of the "Magenta" was sponsored by the Government of Italy in the 19th century. <br />Giglioli conducted a detailed study of the chimpanzee skulls which his friend Georg August Schweinfurth collected in the region of today's southern Sudan. He named the species Troglodytes schweinfurthiiSpecies:Pan troglodytes. <br />After his death, Giglioli's collection, together with his extensive archaeological and ethnological library (from 1885 Giglioli concentrated on his ethnographic collection exchanging specimens with the Smithsonian Institution and fellow naturalists, notably Edward Pierson Ramsay), went to the Pigorini National Museum of Prehistory and Ethnography where they are now conserved.The photographic archive includes work by John K. Hillers, Timothy H. O'Sullivan and Charles Milton Bell photos as well as his own. <br />