Henry Meyners Bernard
Henry Meyners Bernard was a British biologist, carcinologist, palaeontologist, mathematician and cleric, and an authority on solifuges, corals and trilobites. He was the third of six children born to Alfred George Farquhar Bernard and Elizabeth Antoinette Moor.
After graduating from Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, Bernard served curacies in Wells and Herefordshire before six years as chaplain of the English Church in Moscow, which he left to study biology and zoology under Professor Ernst Haeckel at Jena. Bernard then catalogued corals and fossils at the British Museum, publishing numerous papers and monographs. In addition he wrote 'The Sense of Sight: Sketch of a New Theory', 'A Suggested Origin of the Segmented Worms', and 'The Problem of Metamerism', 'Studies in the Retina' and co-authored a 'Textbook of Comparative Anatomy'. He became a Fellow of the Linnean and Zoological Societies. He was a socialist, and wrote The Scientific Basis of Socialism: Two Essays in Evolution. He died at 109, West End Lane, London, N.W.
The crustacean family Apodidae was later renamed Triopsidae as it duplicated the family name used for swifts.
Personal life
He married on 19 November 1883 in Vienna, Austria to Maida Mirrielees, Russian-born daughter of Archibald Mirrielees, founder of Muir & Mirrielees Co. (later renamed TsUM), a high end department store in Moscow. They had three children- Una Mirrilees Bernard b. 11 April 1886
- Ida Bernard b. 11 July 1888
- Maude Bernard b. 26 March 1890, d. 1945
Close friends
Works
- 1893 Trilobites with Antennae.
- 1894 Systematic Position of the Trilobites.
- 1894 Systematic Position of the Trilobites.
- 1894 Trilobites developed by the Sandblast.
- 1895 The Zoological Position of the Trilobites.
- 1896 The comparative morphology of the Galeodidae - Transactions of the Linnean Society of London
- 1897 Fossil Apodidae.
- 1897 Natural history - R. Lydekker, W. F. Kirby, B. B. Woodward, R. Kirpatrick, R. I. Pocock, R. Bowdler Sharpe, W. Garstang, F. A. Bather, H. M. Bernard
- On the Affinities of the Madreporarian genus Alveopora with the Palaeozoic Favositidae.