{"id":23513,"date":"2022-03-31T11:00:33","date_gmt":"2022-03-31T15:00:33","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=23513"},"modified":"2024-04-03T15:40:52","modified_gmt":"2024-04-03T19:40:52","slug":"margarets-book-a-natural-history-of-english-insects","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2022\/03\/31\/margarets-book-a-natural-history-of-english-insects\/","title":{"rendered":"Margaret’s Book: A Natural History of English Insects"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Krista Stracka ~<\/em><\/p>\n

\"Colored<\/a>
A Natural History of English Insects<\/em> by Eleazar Albin. London, 1720.
Albin dedicated each of the 100 plates to an important patron.
Almost half were dedicated to female subscribers.
National Library of Medicine #2433083R<\/em><\/a><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

As Spring gets underway in the Northern Hemisphere and the days grow warmer, a range of brightly colored butterflies and moths will begin to emerge from overwintering and flutter about the sky. Published in 1720, Eleazar Albin\u2019s A Natural History of English Insects<\/em><\/a> includes one hundred vibrantly colored plates that capture the lifecycle of these creatures \u201ccuriously engraven from life.\u201d Albin, a naturalist and artist, recounts in the preface how he developed an interest in plants and insects through his work as a teacher of drawing and painting in watercolors as well as his network of connections that led to the book\u2019s publication and popularity. During the summer of 1918, the National Library of Medicine acquired this author presentation copy bound in gilt-tooled red goatskin. On this final day of Women\u2019s History Month<\/a>, we\u2019re looking at the names of the women within its pages who were involved in the scientific network during the eighteenth century as patrons, subscribers, collectors, and more.<\/p>\n

\"A<\/a>
The list of subscribers bound near the start of the book includes the names of individuals who purchased a copy in advance.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

The work to print and engrave a book like this would have been too costly endeavor for Albin to cover alone, especially with the large family he supported. The book was published by subscription through the patronage of gardener and botanist Mary Somerset, Dowager Duchess of Beaufort<\/a> who had commissioned Albin to paint butterflies and moths for her. As Michael A. Salmon stated in The Aurelian Legacy<\/em><\/a> (2000), the \u201cfirst collectors of entomology were women of high social standing\u201d and included Somerset as one of two prominent individuals. Somerset encouraged Albin to create this book and through her patronage procured subscriptions from people in her exclusive network that he would not have had access to otherwise. The list at the start of the book contains the names of over 150 subscribers. Nearly 40 percent of the subscribers were women, including the book\u2019s dedicatee, the Princess of Wales, Caroline of Ansbach<\/a> (later queen of Great Britain). Work began in 1713 but was delayed due to slowed subscriptions after the death of Somerset in 1715.<\/p>\n