Cornelius Jan van der Horst
Geslacht: | Man | |
Vader: | Johannes Martinus van der Horst | |
Moeder: | Louwine Hermine Heerma | |
Geboren: | 11 MEI 1889 | Nieuwer Amstel |
Overleden: | 10 OKT 1951 | Johannesburg, Zuid Afrika |
Beroep: | privaat-docent, bioloog | |
Aantekeningen: | Huygens Institute - Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) Citation: H. Boschma, Levensbericht C.J. van der Horst, in: Jaarboek, 1951-1952, Amsterdam, pp. 202-206 --- C.J. van der Horst (1889 - 1951) Field(s) of interest: zoology Gender: male Born: Nieuwer-Amstel, 11-05-1889 Died: Johannesburg, 10-10-1951 Memberships: Koninklijke Nederlandsche Akademie van Wetenschappen Correspondent "Afdeling Natuurkunde": 5-6-1950 ---- Cornelius Jan van der Horst (11 May 1889, Nieuwer-Amstel 10 October 1951, Johannesburg) was a Dutch biologist who worked mainly on marine biology and embryology in both the Netherlands and South Africa. As an undergraduate he studied botany and zoology at the University of Amsterdam where he was appointed assistant in the Botany Department under Professor Dr Hugo de Vries before moving on to assist Max Wilhelm Carl Weber at the University's Zoological Museum and in 1917 he became the principal assistant for general Zoology. In 1916 he published his thesis De motorische kernen en banen in de hersenen der visschen. Hare taxonomische waarde en neurobiotactische beteekenis ("The motor nuclei and orbits in the brain of the fish. Its taxonomic value and neurobiotactic meaning "). The research for this thesis was carried out at the Netherlands Central Institute for Brain Research under C. U. Ariëns Kappers. In 1925 Van der Horst was appointed Deputy Director of this Netherlands Central Institute for Brain Research and in 1928 he moved to South Africa where he took up a post as senior lecturer in zoology at the University of The Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. in 1932 he was promoted to professor in zoology at this University.[1] |
Gezin 1
Huwelijkspartner: | Katharina Jacoba Aletta Vergouwen | geb. 1897 |
Huwelijk: | 26 MRT 1918 | Leiden |