Johannes Swammerdam

Other name:
Jan
Antony's:
colleague from Amsterdam who visited but found him hard to reason with
Birth or Baptism date:
February 12, 1637
Death or Burial date:
February 17, 1680

In addition to Hartsoeker, Swammerdam was the other major Dutch microscopist of the Golden Age. He published in the Royal Society's Philosophical Transactions alongside Leeuwenhoek in vols 8 and 10. Swammerdam put his energy into studying the life cycle of insects and developed influential techniques, including wax injection, for examining, preserving, and dissecting specimens. They visited and corresponded and referred to each other in their letters to others.

Leeuwenhoek wrote to Henry Oldenburg on September 7, 1674 (AB 11):

Dr. Swammerdam hath again within this fortnight visited me twice, accompanied with a Gentleman, to both of which I have shew'd many of these Microscopical Observations, and of such others as I had formerly spoken to him about; perceiving that his speculations are busy upon this subject, and that probably he will discourse more largely of it than I have done hitherto.

Swammerdam wrote to Melchisedec Thevenot on April 28, 1678:

It is impossible to go into discussion with him [Leeuwenhoek], as he is biased, and reasons in a very barbarical way, having no academic education.

Between those two letters, Swammerdam spent the winter of 1675-76 with the mystic Antoinette Bourignon.

The most common portrait of Swammerdam, on the right, does not depict Swammerdam. There is no known portrait of him.

His writings were published six decades after his death by Herman Boerhaave as Bybel der Natuure, of Historie der Insecten. Boerhaave edited out the extensive sections on religion, prepared Latin translation and the plates, and wrote a short biography. He also used "Jan" on the title page, though Swammerdam called himself Johannes.

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Publications:

Extracts of Two Letters of Dr. Swammerdam, Concerning Some Animals, That Having Lungs are Yet Found to be without the Arterious Vein; together with Some Other Curious Particulars. Phil. Trans. January 1, 1673 8:6040-6042

Extracts of Three Letters: ... The Second, of Dr. Swammerdam, Touching an Un-Usual Rupture of the Mesentery. Phil. Trans. January 1, 1675 10:272-279

Bybel der Natuure, of Historie der Insecten

English translation: The Book of Nature, or, The History of Insects

Marriage
Spouse:

Swammerdam never married.

What happened?
Learn more
Related sources:
Year Author Title
1737 Swammerdam, J. Bybel der Natuure, of Historie der Insecten
1941 Schierbeek, A. Leeuwenhoek en Swammerdam
1946 Loggem, M. van Het kleine heelal
1946 Schierbeek, A. Jan Swammerdam, 12 Februari 1637-17 Februari 1680; zijn leven en zijn werken.
1975 Lindeboom, G. A. The letters of Jan Swammerdam to Melchisedec Thévenot
1981 Lindeboom, G. A. Jan Swammerdam als Microscopist
1981 Fournier, M. Jan Swammerdam en de 17e Eeuwse Microscopie
1981 Houtzager, H. L. Onder professoren in de 17e eeuw
1981 Visser, R. P. W. Theorie en Praktijk van Swammerdams Wetenschappelijke Methode in Zijn Entomologie
1982 Bronswijk, J. E. M. H. van Two fellow students of fleas, lice and mites: Antoni van Leeuwenhoek and Jan Swammerdam
2006 Cobb, M. Generation
2007 Kooijmans, L. Gevaarlijke Kennis
2007 Fournier, M. Personal styles in microscopy: Leeuwenhoek, Swammerdam and Huygens.
2013 various Circulation of Knowledge and Learned Practices in the 17th-century Dutch Republic
2013 Jorink, E. De profeet en de boekhouder
2016 Jorink, E. Swammerdam, hoveling?
2017 Anderson, D. Some comments on Jorink’s ‘Swammerdam, hoveling?’
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