Michalina Isaakowa
Michalina Isaakowa was a Polish amateur entomologist, traveler and writer who was admitted to the Polish Entomological Society. She specialized in the butterflies of South America and travelled there alone to collect them, returning to Poland with 15,000 specimens. She disappeared in Peru while on her second butterfly collection trip.
Biography
Michalina Hochbaum was the daughter of the administrator of several landed estates in the Świętokrzyskie region of Poland, Natal Hochbaum and Emilia Kiesiewicz, who had numerous offspring. Little is known about her early education, but she knew Latin and French and spoke Russian fluently. She also had considerable knowledge in the fields of biology, geography and history.While she was in her thirties, Michalina married the widower Julius Isaac and began using her married name Michalina Isaakowa. Her husband was a respected amateur entomologist, owner of a large collection of unique insect specimens and author of entomological publications. She settled with him in Zawiercie, Silesia, and under his guidance she transformed from an observer of local living species of the order Lepidoptera into the first Polish butterfly researcher. Every day, she accompanied her husband on field expeditions, and also expanded her knowledge and honed her practical entomologist skills in his studio in Zawiercie.
Brazil trip
The couple shared a dream to travel to South America to search for tropical butterflies on their own. Unfortunately, a lack of adequate funds, and later Isaac's illness and death in 1923, prevented their departure. So she realized the trip on her own. After three years of preparation, and at 46 years of age, Isaakowa set out in September 1926 for Brazil. She sailed from Marseille, France, to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and she stayed in that country for almost two years from 1926 to 1928. During that time she traversed the state of Paraná, reached the Ivaí River and the Apucarana area, among other places. Her expeditions in Paraná were fraught with danger - getting lost in the thick jungle, encountering wild animals, unpredictable and sudden weather events, and attacks by armed bandits terrorizing the local population. In addition to collecting butterflies in the field, she spent a lot of effort getting to know the people in Polish settlements in Curitiba. It was to this city that she headed as soon as she arrived in Brazil. Within a few months, she had learned Portuguese, as well as how to ride horses, row boats and shoot guns.She kept a record of her travels in a detailed diary. Her accounts from Brazil appeared in a book published in 1937 entitled Polka in the Parana Wilderness, accompanied by photographs she had taken. Her book is an excellent naturalistic documentation of the Parana jungle that no longer exists in the condition described in the book.
Isaakowa returned to Poland in May 1928, bringing back 15,000 specimens. She later presented her work, holding exhibitions and lectures throughout the country, which were very popular. In recognition of her original research, she was admitted to the Polish Entomological Society.