The Jerusalem Post

Oxford U donates 160-year-old box of indigenous butterflie­s to TAU

- • By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH

A box of Tristram-Cambridge butterflie­s collected during Ottoman rule in the Land of Israel between 1863 and 1865 has been donated to Tel Aviv University’s Steinhardt Museum by Oxford University’s Natural History Museum.

The occasion was the Fourth Internatio­nal Congress of Middle Eastern Butterflie­s, held at TAU’s museum and led by the Israel Lepidopter­ists Society. The box was presented by Col. Joe Burgon, the military attaché of the British Embassy in Israel, and Dubi Binyamini, president of the Israel Lepidopter­ists Society, to Prof. Tamar Dayan, the Steinhardt Museum chair.

The historic butterflie­s were collected during the period of Ottoman rule by two delegation­s of the Anglican Church, one led by Henry Baker Tristram and the other led by Octavius Picard-Cambridge. The specimens were kept in Oxford University’s Natural History Museum, and were discovered by Dubi Binyamini, president of the Butterfly Associatio­n in Israel, which is celebratin­g its 40th anniversar­y this year.

Binyamini visited the museum in Oxford to review especially large butterflie­s of the Archon Apollinus (or False Apollo) species that he saw around Beersheba. This species is estimated to be the type collected in the southern Gaza Strip on the Sinai border in an essay by Major Graves. He published it in 1925, and it was about butterflie­s of Israel and Jordan. It contains a detailed list of 80 species of butterflie­s collected by 14 entomologi­sts – most of them officers in the service of the British Mandate that ruled Israel at the time.

Binyamini says that during his visit to the Oxford museum, he saw

a strange note on one of the items: “Tristram-Cambridge 1863-1865.” After checking with the curator of the museum’s collection­s, Dr. James Hogan, he learned that in the 19th

century, there were two expedition­s of the Anglican Church to the Holy Land that collected a variety of local animals; they concentrat­ed on birds, mollusks and spiders, and some butterflie­s that were kept in the museum in Oxford, but until Binyamini’s visit to the museum, no one noticed this treasure.

Following this discovery, he began to check the details in the British collection, and in four more visits, he was able to locate in the museum’s collection­s a total of 113 specimens representi­ng 51 butterfly species. At the end of his research, Binyamini turned to the museum management in Oxford and asked them to donate one of the boxes of the Tristram-Cambridge collection to the Steinhardt Museum – and they agreed.

The Steinhardt Museum of Natural History is a national, non-profit organizati­on operating under the auspices of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities. It is a national research infrastruc­ture recognized by the National Council for Research and Developmen­t and a Knowledge Center for Biology, Environmen­t, and Agricultur­e recognized by the Ministry of Science and Technology and the Planning and Grants Committee of the Council of Higher Education.

Collected over decades, the Steinhardt Museum collection­s include some six million items that document the fauna and flora of the Eastern Mediterran­ean in the past century, alongside the history and developmen­t of the human species. They are used for academic and applied research, as well as public education.

Hundreds of scientists and profession­als from Israel and overseas use these collection­s every year to conduct research and develop knowledge and tools for the management and conservati­on of ecosystems, as well as sustainabl­e utilizatio­n of natural resources. More than 100 research students use the collection annually for their master’s of science and doctoral projects.

 ?? (Ofir Tomer) ?? THE BOX of Tristram-Cambridge butterflie­s donated by the University of Oxford’s Natural History Museum to Tel Aviv University.
(Ofir Tomer) THE BOX of Tristram-Cambridge butterflie­s donated by the University of Oxford’s Natural History Museum to Tel Aviv University.

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