Peter Thonning

{{Short description|Danish physician and botanist}}

Image:Peter Thonning.jpg

Peter Thonning (9 October 1775 – 29 January 1848) was a Danish physician and botanist.

{{cite web|url= https://kiki.huh.harvard.edu/databases/botanist_search.php?mode=details&id=21151|title = Peter Thonning

|website= Harvard University Herbaria and Libraries|access-date=May 1, 2020}}

{{cite web|url= https://runeberg.org/dbl/17/0244.html|title =Peder Thonboe 1769-1806 |website= Dansk biografisk Lexikon

|access-date=May 1, 2020}}

Biography

File:Peter Thonnings kort over de danske støttepunkter ved Guldkysten kopi fra 1818 af P. J. Hjort GK-8-16-red.jpg

Peter Thonning was born in Copenhagen, Denmark. He was the son of Rasmus Andersen Thonning (1740-1817) and Dorothea Spendrup (1755-1835).

He became a student in 1794 and studied medicine at the Metropolitanskolen.

He was sent to Ghana by the Danish government mainly to study the conditions of plants, especially indigenous plants. He lived there from 1799 to 1803. Thonning had begun systematizing his botanical collections but his herbarium was destroyed during the shelling of Copenhagen by the British in 1807. Only the duplicates and manuscripts in the possession of Heinrich Christian Friedrich Schumacher (1757–1830) survived. Today, around 1,050 samples are preserved at the University of Copenhagen Botanical Garden.

{{cite journal|url= https://journals.uio.no/museolog/article/view/3686

|title = Peter Thonning and the natural historical collections of Denmark's Prince Christian (VIII), 1806-07 |journal= Nordisk Museologi |author= Daniel Hopkins |year = 1970 |issue = 2 |pages = 149 |doi = 10.5617/nm.3686 |access-date=May 1, 2020|doi-access = free }}

Thonning tutored Ferdinand, Hereditary Prince of Denmark (1792–1863) from 1804 to 1810. He served as secretary of the General Customs Board (Generaltoldkammeret) in 1810 and from 1812 also secretary of the Canal, Port and Lighthouse Directorate (Kanal, Havne og Fyrdirektionen). He was a member of this Executive Board in 1815–16. In 1829, he joined the Executive Board of the Natural History Museum of Denmark and held this position until his death.

Personal life

Thonning was married in 1810 to Anna Maria Nicolina Kamphøffner (1784-1860). He died in Copenhagen during 1848 and was buried at Assistens Kirkegård.

Authority name

The genus Thonningia of parasitic plants was named after him by Martin Vahl. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Thonn. when citing a botanical name.{{cite book|last = Brummitt|first = R. K.|author2=C. E. Powell|title = Authors of Plant Names |publisher = Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew |year = 1992 |isbn = 1-84246-085-4}}

References

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Other sources

  • Daniel Hopkins (2012) Peter Thonning and Denmark's Guinea Commission: A Study in Nineteenth-Century African Colonial Geography (Brill. The Atlantic World, Volume: 24){{ISBN|978-9004228689}}

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Category:1775 births

Category:1848 deaths

Category:Physicians from Copenhagen

Category:19th-century Danish physicians

Category:19th-century Danish botanists

Category:Collection managers

Category:Botanists with author abbreviations

Category:Knights of the Order of the Dannebrog

Category:Burials at Assistens Cemetery (Copenhagen)