Hendrik Weyenbergh Jr.
Hendrik Weyenbergh Jr. was a Dutch zoologist, entomologist and paleontologist who worked mainly in Argentina.
Biography
Weyenbergh initially studied surgery and obstetrics at the Medical School in Haarlem, graduating at the age of 21. He continued his studies in Utrecht and eventually earned a doctorate at the University of Göttingen with an entomological dissertation. Early on, Weyenbergh expressed his support for Darwin’s theory of evolution.In 1872, Weyenbergh moved to Argentina at the invitation of Hermann Burmeister. He taught at the Universidad Nacional de Córdoba until he became involved in a conflict between Burmeister and several young European scientists. In his 1873 inaugural lecture, Weyenbergh referred not only to Darwin’s theory of evolution, against which Burmeister was fiercely opposed, but also to Ernst Haeckel’s Generelle Morphologie, which had explicitly criticized Burmeister. Burmeister’s authoritarian stance provoked a revolt among the young European scientists he had himself brought to Argentina. In 1874, this led to the dismissal of Weyenbergh and several of his colleagues, which in turn prompted sharp criticism of Burmeister from European scholars.
Weyenbergh, however, did not leave Córdoba. He founded the Zoological Museum in Córdoba. He also became President of the Argentine Academia Nacional de Ciencias. In 1884, due to illness, he returned to the Netherlands, where he died in 1885.