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The Saruman Museum was a private butterfly museum established in England in the 1970s. It was also known as the National Butterfly Museum and functioned as a natural history dealer. The founder, Paul Edgar Smart FRES (born c. 1940), a gentleman scientist, was the author of The Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Butterfly World. In this work two-thousand butterflies are shown life size on 61 double-page colour plates. All the specimens were held by the Saruman Museum and were photographed there. The taxonomic appendix was much reduced. Only the parts on Papilionidae (swallowtail butterflies) were complete. The parts on other families were published by Sciences Nat. It is a seminal work of lepidopterology and much cited as [EBW]; Smart, 1976 Illust. Encyp. Butt. World. The Illustrated Encyclopedia was preceded by Paul Smart and Chris Samson's Butterflies Presented By Saruman which was published as a paperback by Saruman Butterflies in 1973.
The first dealership was at 58 High street Tunbridge Wells. When it became a museum, it was at St Giles in the Wood, Beckley at Rye. Around 1977 Smart bought St Mary's House at Bramber in Sussex, a 15th-century timber-framed house on a site associated with the Knights Templar.
The new Saruman Museum (named from a character in J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings ) became known as the National Butterfly Museum. It was said that at the time, Smart had the largest collection outside of the British Museum (Natural History).
His personal collection of British butterflies and their forma and aberrations was very extensive and complete. It was housed in fine Gurney cabinets (Thomas Gurney, cabinet maker, Broadway, London Fields). Equally well known was his library which contained many rare and very rare works (he was also a book dealer). Smart also had historic specimens which had been caught by Alfred Russel Wallace and specimens caught as long ago as 1795.
The enterprise failed and the collection was sold at Christie's auction house in July 1982.
Associated with the museum were Trevor Scott FRES; Chris Samson FRES; John Muirhead FRES; magasin Deyrolles of Rue du Bac, Paris; and Henri Descimon of the Laboratoire de Zoologie de l'Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris.
In 1979 Smart founded a short-lived journal The Aurelian named for Moses Harris's The Aurelian: Or, Natural History of English Insects (1766, 2nd ed. 1775).
Philip Perceval Graves was an Anglo-Irish journalist and writer. While working as a foreign correspondent of The Times in Constantinople, he exposed The Protocols of the Elders of Zion as an antisemitic plagiarism, fraud and hoax.
Margaret Elizabeth Fountaine, was a Victorian lepidopterist, natural history illustrator, diarist, and traveller who published in The Entomologist's Record and Journal of Variation. She is also known for her personal diaries, which were edited into two volumes by W.F. Cater for the popular market and published posthumously.
Ferdinand Heinrich Herman Strecker was an American entomologist specialising in butterflies and moths (Lepidoptera).
Polyura is a subgenus of butterflies also referred to as Nawab butterflies and belonging to the brush-footed butterfly subfamily Charaxinae, or leafwing butterflies. Like the large and conspicuous forest queens, they belong to the genus Charaxes, unique genus of the tribe Charaxini.
Poritia is a genus of lycaenid butterflies. The species of this genus are found in the Indomalayan realm. Poritia was erected by Frederic Moore in 1887.
James John Joicey FES was an English amateur entomologist, who assembled an extensive collection of Lepidoptera in his private research museum, called the Hill Museum, in Witley, Surrey. His collection, 40 years in the making, was considered to have been the second largest in the world held privately and to have numbered over 1.5 million specimens. Joicey was a fellow of the Zoological Society of London, the Royal Geographical Society, the Royal Entomological Society, the Royal Horticultural Society, and the Linnean Society of London.
John Heath FRES was an English entomologist, specialising in lepidoptera. He helped to established data banks as a tool for conservation policy, both at a national and local level; was chief editor of The Moths and Butterflies of Great Britain and Ireland; and helped to develop the Heath Trap, a portable moth light used for recording moths at light.
Papilio leucotaenia, the cream-banded swallowtail, is a species of butterfly in the family Papilionidae. It is found in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Burundi, Rwanda, and Uganda. The habitat consists of forests at altitudes ranging from 2,100 to 2,300 meters.
Arthur Francis Hemming, CMG, CBE was an English entomologist who specialised in Lepidoptera. He was mostly known, both professionally and socially, by his middle-name as Francis Hemming.
George Thomas Bethune-Baker was an English entomologist who specialised in Lepidoptera, especially those in the family Lycaenidae of butterflies.
George Talbot FES was an English entomologist who specialised in butterflies. He wrote about 150 scientific papers, the majority being primarily systematic, consisting of the description of new species or the revision of various genera. He was also responsible for the curation and preservation of the Joicey collection of Lepidoptera prior to its accession by the Natural History Museum.
Lepidopterology is a branch of entomology concerning the scientific study of moths and the two superfamilies of butterflies. Someone who studies in this field is a lepidopterist or, archaically, an aurelian.
Henley Grose-Smith (1833–1911) was an English entomologist who specialised in Lepidoptera.
Papilio echerioides, the white-banded swallowtail, is a butterfly of the family Papilionidae. It is found in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Charaxes xiphares, the forest king emperor or forest king charaxes, is a butterfly of the family Nymphalidae. It is native to Afromontane forest in the eastern and southern Afrotropical realm.
Charaxes jahlusa, the pearl-spotted emperor or pearl spotted charaxes, is a butterfly of the family Nymphalidae found in southern Africa.
Percy Ireland Lathy was an English entomologist who specialised in butterflies. He was an acquaintance of James John Joicey and was associated with Joicey's Hill Museum in Witley, Surrey.
Charaxes montis is a butterfly in the family Nymphalidae. It is found in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, south-western Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi. The habitat consists of montane forests.
Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Herbert Elliot Jackson was an English coffee farmer in Kenya. He served as an officer in the British Army during the Second World War, seeing service with the King's African Rifles and as a military administrator in British Somaliland. Jackson served in the Kenyan colonial administration during the Mau Mau Rebellion.
Emma Sarah Hutchinson was a British, Victorian, lepidopterist who authored the 1879 book Entomology and Botany as Pursuits for Ladies and published in The Entomologist's Record and Journal of Variation. She reared butterflies and moths from eggs and her work contributed to understanding of the Lepidoptera life cycle. The summer form of the Polygonia c-album butterfly species, known as the comma, is named hutchinsoni in her honour.
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