By Peter Hannaford on 9.14.07 @ 12:07AM
The story of the great Alexander von Humboldt.
"Fame is the spur," wrote John Milton. In 1674 he thus added a
new twist to "Fame is ephemeral -- fame and the famous as well,"
declared by Marcus Aurelius in ancient Rome. Andy Warhol had the
last word: Everyone gets 15 minutes of fame. Today's Hollywood
celebrities such as Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan, famous for
being famous, seem to be using egg timers to stay within the Warhol
time limit.
It wasn't always so. Living as I now do in Humboldt County, on
California's northern coast, I was curious about its namesake and
did some research. It happens that the 238th anniversary of
Alexander von Humboldt's birth takes place on Friday, September 14.
Hardly anyone today remembers who he was, but his fame way
outlasted the Warhol Rule. He was famous all over Europe, the
Americas and Asia for several decades of the 19th century and
beyond.
Had he lived today, Humboldt would have been dubbed by the media
a "scientist's scientist." He made no seminal discovery that
changed the world in the way Copernicus, Galileo and Isaac Newton
did. His curiosity was so far-ranging, however, that he was, at one
and the same time, an artist, author, botanist, cartographer,
naturalist and scholar of sociology.
Born in 1769 to a Prussian military officer and an ambitious
mother, Humboldt grew up on an estate just outside Berlin. He
launched his career as an inspector of mines at age 22. He
organized a free school for miners and, from his notes, wrote a
book about underground flora.
Five years later his mother died and left him wealthy, free to
roam the world in the service of science. A child of the
Enlightenment, but an adult in the Industrial Revolution, he sought
scientific proof for many a theory. By the time his major traveling
was done, in the 1840s, his discoveries had expanded the world's
horizons in the fields of anthropology, archaeology, botany,
geography, meteorology, mineralogy, oceanography and zoology.
His epic journey through Central and South America in 1799-1804
yielded many discoveries and saw him reach an elevation of 19,286
in the Andes (a world record at the time) and, soon after, plodding
through Amazon jungles in search of the river's source. Up and down
volcanoes, he decided they came from fissures deep the earth, thus
upending the popular view that they were built up from ancient
oceans.
On that journey, he stopped in Washington, D.C. on the way home
to dine with President Jefferson. He then settled in Paris, where
the stimulating intellectual life pleased him in contrast to
Berlin's provincialism at the time. He later traveled the length
and breadth of Russia to expand his knowledge of the planet
further.
Humboldt became the toast of Paris and the continent. His
praises were sung worldwide. Charles Darwin called him "the
greatest scientific traveler who ever lived." Cities and towns
scrambled to attach his name to them in the hope that his
intellectual prowess would rub off on them. The list of his
namesakes is not endless, but very long: 14 towns in the United
States and Canada, U.S. counties in California, Nevada and Iowa, a
river, several flowers and shrubs, mountains in North and South
America, Antarctica, Australia and New Zealand, a glacier in
Greenland, a "sea" on the moon, a large bay in California,
universities in Germany and California, a major ocean current, a
penguin and a seven-foot-long squid that migrated from South
America to Monterey Bay in California this summer, nearly gobbling
up all the marine life there.
All that fame spurred him on to greater efforts, not just for
fame a la today's pop culture, but to expand scientific
knowledge. In 1845, when he was 75, the first volume of
Cosmos, his masterwork, was published. The fourth volume
came out in 1858 when he was 88. That was a year before he
died.
What of Alexander von Humboldt now? He's not often mentioned,
but then Paris Hilton hasn't had 14 towns and a giant squid named
after her. Those will last longer than 15 minutes.
topics:
Hollywood, Military, Russia