{"id":512118,"date":"2024-02-11T11:10:34","date_gmt":"2024-02-11T16:10:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/platohealth.ai\/the-complete-library-of-charles-darwin-revealed-for-the-first-time\/"},"modified":"2024-02-11T15:15:13","modified_gmt":"2024-02-11T20:15:13","slug":"the-complete-library-of-charles-darwin-revealed-for-the-first-time","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/platohealth.ai\/the-complete-library-of-charles-darwin-revealed-for-the-first-time\/","title":{"rendered":"The Complete Library of Charles Darwin revealed for the first time","gt_translate_keys":[{"key":"rendered","format":"text"}]},"content":{"rendered":"
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Charles Darwin \u2013 arguably the most influential man of science in history, accumulated a vast personal library throughout his working life. Until now, 85 per cent of its contents were unknown or unpublished.  <\/em><\/p>\n

Credit: Reproduced with kind permission by State Darwin Museum, Moscow.<\/p>\n

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Charles Darwin \u2013 arguably the most influential man of science in history, accumulated a vast personal library throughout his working life. Until now, 85 per cent of its contents were unknown or unpublished.  <\/em><\/p>\n

This year, coinciding with Darwin\u2019s 215th birthday, The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online<\/em>, the scholarly project helmed by Dr John van Wyhe at the National University of Singapore (NUS) Department of Biological Sciences, has released an online 300-page catalogue detailing Darwin\u2019s complete personal library, with 7,400 titles across 13,000 volumes and items including books, pamphlets and journals. Previous lists only had 15 per cent of his whole collection. Darwin\u2019s library has also been virtually re-assembled with 9,300 links to copies of the works freely available online.<\/p>\n

\u201cThis unprecedentedly detailed view of Darwin\u2019s complete library allows one to appreciate more than ever that he was not an isolated figure working alone but an expert of his time building on the sophisticated science and studies and other knowledge of thousands of people. Indeed, the size and range of works in the library makes manifest the extraordinary extent of Darwin\u2019s research into the work of others,\u201d said Dr van Wyhe.<\/p>\n

Discovering Darwin\u2019s complete library<\/u><\/strong><\/p>\n

After his death in 1882, much of Darwin\u2019s library was preserved and catalogued, but many other items were dispersed or lost, and details of the vast majority of the contents have never been published until now. For many years, scholars have referred to Darwin\u2019s library as containing 1,480 books, based on those that survive in the two main collections, the University of Cambridge and Down House.<\/p>\n

Over 18 years the Darwin Online project has identified thousands of Darwin\u2019s obscure references in his own catalogues and lists of items such as pamphlets and journals that were originally in his library. Each reference required its own detective story to discover the publications that Darwin had hurriedly recorded. In addition, missing details such as author, date or the source of clippings in thousands of records from older catalogues have been identified for the first time.<\/p>\n

A major source of information that helped to reveal the original contents is the 426-page handwritten \u201cCatalogue of the Library of Charles Darwin\u201d, compiled from 1875. Painstaking comparison of its abbreviated entries revealed 440 unknown titles that were originally in the library. An inventory of his home made after his death recorded 2,065 bound books and an unknown number of unbound volumes and pamphlets. In the drawing room, 133 titles and 289 volumes of mostly unscientific literature were recorded. Amazingly, the legacy duty valuer estimated that the \u201cScientific Library that is books relating to Science\u201d was worth only 30 pounds and 12 shillings [about \u00a32,000 today] Indeed, all the books were valued at only66 pounds and 10 shillings [about \u00a34,400 today]. Today any book that belonged to Darwin is worth a great deal to collectors.<\/p>\n

Other sources of information that helped to build Darwin\u2019s complete library were lists of pamphlets, Darwin\u2019s reading notebooks, Emma Darwin\u2019s diaries, the Catalogue of books given to the Cambridge Botany School in 1908 and the 30 volumes of the Darwin Correspondence<\/em>. Items that still exist but were never included in the lists of Darwin\u2019s library include his unbound materials at Cambridge University Library, books now in other institutional collections, private collections and books sold at auctions over the past 130 years. Combining these and many other sources of evidence allowed Darwin\u2019s library to be reconstructed.<\/p>\n

For example, Darwin\u2019s copy of an 1826 article by the ornithologist John James Audubon: \u2018Account of the habits of the Turkey Buzzard (Vultura aura<\/em>), particularly with the view of exploding the opinion generally entertained of its extraordinary power of smelling\u2019 was sold in 1975. Darwin had investigated this point during the voyage of the Beagle<\/em> and recorded reading a critic of Audubon in the lost Galapagos notebook<\/em>. In 2019, a copy of Elizabeth Gaskell\u2019s 1880 novel Wives and daughters<\/em> appeared at auction. A note in it records: \u201cThis book was a great favourite of Charles Darwin\u2019s and the last book to be read aloud to him.\u201d<\/p>\n

Understanding Darwin\u2019s library<\/u><\/strong><\/p>\n

Most of the works in Darwin\u2019s library are, unsurprisingly, on scientific subjects, especially biology and geology. Yet, the library also included works on farming, animal breeding and behaviour, geographical distribution, philosophy, psychology, religion, and other topics that interested Darwin, such as art, history, travel and language. Most of the works are in English, but almost half are in other languages, especially German, French and Italian as well as Dutch, Danish, Spanish, Swedish and Latin.<\/p>\n

Some of the hundreds of books not previously known to be in Darwin\u2019s library include Sun Pictures<\/em>, <\/em>a 1872 coffee table book showcasing photographs of artworks. Another book that the we did not know that the Darwins purchased was a copy of the popular science book on gorillas that was all the rage just after Origin of species<\/em> was published: Paul Du Chaillu\u2019s Explorations and adventures in equatorial Africa<\/em>. Of the thousands of shorter items were also found in Darwin\u2019s library, such as an issue of a German scientific periodical sent to him in 1877 that contained the first published photographs of bacteria and another article amusingly entitled The hateful or Colorado grasshopper<\/em>. In his complete library, Darwin\u2019s eclectic sources are there for all to see.<\/p>\n

Click to view The Complete Library of Charles Darwin<\/p>\n

Click to view Introduction to the Library by John van Wyhe<\/p>\n


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