Jump to content

Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography/Jügler, Lorenz

From Wikisource

Edition of 1892. No confirmation of this person's existence outside of Appletons' and derived sources has as yet been located, but there is also no verifiable source which states the person is one of Appletons' fictitious entries. Use this information with extra caution. Suspicious due to spelling errors in the title of two of his alleged literary works.

JÜGLER, Lorenz (yu'-gler), German naturalist, b. in Detmold in 1692; d. in Halle in 1764. He united with the Moravian church, but was afterward converted to the Lutheran faith. He became preceptor to the children of the Prince of Reuss-Greitz, and professor of chemistry at the University of Göttingen, and afterward at Dortrecht. The young Prince of Reuss died in 1746 and left him a handsome legacy, which enabled him to travel. After a journey of three years in Europe he sailed for India in 1749, but was taken in the latter country as a spy both by the French and English, and in spite of his protestations was not allowed to proceed. Returning to Holland, he sailed for Boston, and travelled in North and South America for seven years, settling in Halle on his return in 1755. Among his many publications are “Geschichte und Zustaende der Deutschen in Amerika” (Leipsic, 1756); “Metallurgische Reise durch einen Theil von Neu England” (Halle, 1756); “Erste Urkunden der Geschichte der Amerikas” (2 vols., 1757); “Thesaurus geographicus” (1758); and “Flora Americanæ” (2 vols., 1763-'4).