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Haeckel, Ernst Heinrich Philipp August
Pessoa singular · 1834-1919

Ernst Haeckel was a German zoologist, naturalist, eugenicist, philosopher, physician, professor, marine biologist and artist. He discovered, described and named thousands of new species, mapped a genealogical tree relating all life forms and coined many terms in biology, including ecology, phylum, phylogeny and Protista. Haeckel promoted and popularised Charles Darwin's work in Germany and developed the influential but no longer widely held recapitulation theory claiming that an individual organism's biological development, or ontogeny, parallels and summarises its species' evolutionary development, or phylogeny.

The published artwork of Haeckel includes over 100 detailed, multi-colour illustrations of animals and sea creatures, collected in his Kunstformen der Natur ("Art Forms of Nature"), a book which would go on to influence the Art Nouveau artistic movement

Hargreave, J
Pessoa singular · fl 1902
Hart, Ernest Abraham
Pessoa singular · 1836-1898

Ernest Abraham Hart was an English medical journalist. He was the editor of The British Medical Journal

Hatton, George James Finch-
Pessoa singular · 1815-1887

George James Finch-Hatton was a British peer and Tory politician

Hilgendorf, Franz Martin 
Pessoa singular · 1839-1904

Franz Martin Hilgendorf was a German zoologist and palaeontologist. Hilgendorf's research on fossil snails from the Steinheim crater in the early 1860s became a palaeontological evidence for the theory of evolution published by Charles Darwin in 1859. Darwin acknowledged the findings of Hilgendorf and referred to his research in the sixth edition of On the Origin of Species, 1872.

Hill, Clement Lloyd, Sir
Pessoa singular · 1845-1913

Diplomat and colonial administrator

Hillier, Thomas
Pessoa singular · fl 1867-1868
Hooker, William Jackson, Sir
Pessoa singular · 1785-1865

Sir William Jackson Hooker was an English botanist and botanical illustrator, who became the first director of Kew when in 1841 it was recommended to be placed under state ownership as a botanic garden. At Kew he founded the Herbarium and enlarged the gardens and arboretum. His son, Joseph Dalton Hooker, succeeded him as Director of Kew Gardens