From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fenton and his student Tanakadate Aikitsu, circa 1877 [1]

Montague Arthur Fenton (29 June 1850 in Doncaster, England – 21 March 1937 in Oakland City, California [2]) was an English entomologist who collected insects throughout Japan.

Fenton was an English language teacher at Tokyo Foreign Language School from 1874 to 1880 at the beginning of the Meiji epoch. Returning to England, he graduated from St. John's College, Cambridge and then worked as an Inspector of Technical Colleges & Schools. In 1889 he married Harriette Eleanor Binny and had a daughter, Sylvia Ermyntrude in 1893. In 1924 or so, Fenton and his wife went to California, where their married daughter then lived. [2] [3] The pierid Leptidea morsei, known as Fenton's wood white, was described and named by him. The types of Lepidoptera described by Fenton are held by the Natural History Museum, London (via his collaborator Arthur Gardiner Butler) who he honoured in the name Antigius butleri.

Works

References

  1. ^ Akira Matuura; Shinpei Matsuda; Kazuo Nakamura; Hironori Kotake (2005). "M.A. Fentonが田中舘愛橘に宛てた手紙" [Letters sent from Montague Arthur Fenton to Tanakadate Aikitu]. 蝶と蛾 (in Japanese). 56 (2): 146–150. doi: 10.18984/lepid.56.2_145. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 September 2018.
  2. ^ a b Matsuda, S.; Nakamura, K. 2005: "A newly described life story of Montague Arthur Fenton." Transactions of the Lepidopterological Society of Japan. Tyô to Ga, Osaka 56 (3):247-267
  3. ^ Groll, E. K. (ed.) 2006 Entomologists of the world (biographies, notes on the current locations of entomological collections) DEI im ZALF e.V.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fenton and his student Tanakadate Aikitsu, circa 1877 [1]

Montague Arthur Fenton (29 June 1850 in Doncaster, England – 21 March 1937 in Oakland City, California [2]) was an English entomologist who collected insects throughout Japan.

Fenton was an English language teacher at Tokyo Foreign Language School from 1874 to 1880 at the beginning of the Meiji epoch. Returning to England, he graduated from St. John's College, Cambridge and then worked as an Inspector of Technical Colleges & Schools. In 1889 he married Harriette Eleanor Binny and had a daughter, Sylvia Ermyntrude in 1893. In 1924 or so, Fenton and his wife went to California, where their married daughter then lived. [2] [3] The pierid Leptidea morsei, known as Fenton's wood white, was described and named by him. The types of Lepidoptera described by Fenton are held by the Natural History Museum, London (via his collaborator Arthur Gardiner Butler) who he honoured in the name Antigius butleri.

Works

References

  1. ^ Akira Matuura; Shinpei Matsuda; Kazuo Nakamura; Hironori Kotake (2005). "M.A. Fentonが田中舘愛橘に宛てた手紙" [Letters sent from Montague Arthur Fenton to Tanakadate Aikitu]. 蝶と蛾 (in Japanese). 56 (2): 146–150. doi: 10.18984/lepid.56.2_145. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 September 2018.
  2. ^ a b Matsuda, S.; Nakamura, K. 2005: "A newly described life story of Montague Arthur Fenton." Transactions of the Lepidopterological Society of Japan. Tyô to Ga, Osaka 56 (3):247-267
  3. ^ Groll, E. K. (ed.) 2006 Entomologists of the world (biographies, notes on the current locations of entomological collections) DEI im ZALF e.V.



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