EN List of natural history dealers
- Johan Hans Abegg (fl. 1882-1885) Mineral collector and dealer in Zurich.
- Augustus Theodore Abel (?1802-1882); German Mineral dealer resident in Ballarat.
- Anton Franz Abraham Preparator and dealer in educational materials at " "Naturhistorisches Institut" on Beatrixgasse, Vienna, 1896, on Ungargasse, Vienna in 1903-1906.Supplied specimens to Archduke Franz Ferdinand.
- Bernardino Astfäller (1879–1964) Insektenhändler in Meran
- Julius Böhm (Mineralienhändler) (c. 1850?-1925) Vienna mineral dealers as "Österr.-ungar. Mineralien-Comptoir" or Austro-Hungarian Mineral Dealership.
- Edward Percy Bottley Gregory, Bottley & Lloyd geology and mineral dealership
- Brazenor Bros Dealers in zoological specimens in Brighton from 1858-1937.
- Nérée Boubée Paris
- Brendel und Sohn Botanical modelmakers in Breslau and Berlin.
- Robert Brendel (Modellbauer) (1821–1898), Erbauer wissenschaftlicher Modell im Bereich Botanik
- Jean Baptiste Lucien Buquet (Paris)
- Emile Clement Australia
- William Deans Cowan Madagascar
- Robert Damon Natural history dealer in Weymouth
- Jules Desbrochers des Loges French insect dealer.
- Émile Deyrolle (1838–1917) French naturalist and natural history dealer in Paris. The business was originally owned by his naturalist grandfather, Jean-Baptiste Deyrolle who opened his shop in 1831 at 23, Rue de la Monnaie. Émile’s father Achille Deyrolle ran the business for many years. It is now at 46, rue du Bac, Paris
- Maarten Dirk van Renesse van Duivenbode trader of bird skins in the Dutch East Indies.
- Henri Donckier de Donceel Paris insect dealer
- Alfred William Ecutt (1879-) Newport, Wales.
- Adolarius Jacob Forster (1739-1806).Leading mineral dealer of the 18th century with premises in London, Paris and St. Petersburg.
- Gustav Adolph Frank (1809–1880) Natural history dealer in Amsterdam who had worldwide trade connections.
- Alfred George Gabriel (1884–1968) English butterfly dealer who also worked for the British Museum.
- Richard Haensch Berlin
- Thomas Hawkins
- George Humphrey London dealer in shells and ‘curiosities’ in the 18th century.
- Charles Jamrach
- Charles Georges Javet
- Edward Wesley Janson London
- Jan Kalinowski Peru
- Emil Riemell, München, Augustenstrasse 41 Insect dealer
- Kny-Scheerer Company, 404 West Twenty- seventh street, New York. Agency for German dealers - specimens, equipment. Active 1900- 1930s?
- Friedrich Kohl (Mineralienhändler) (1839–1907) Fossil and mineral dealer
- Frank H. Lattin & Co. Albion, New York
- Charles Johnson Maynard (1845-1929) Natural history dealer in Boston and Newton, Massachusetts.
- Eugène Le Moult
- Maison Azoux
- Maison Tramond Established by the mid-19th century at 9 Rue de l' Ecole de Medicine in Paris. Later "Maison Tramond - N. Rouppert successeur".Models of human and comparative anatomy and osteological preparations.
- Wilhelm Neuburger Berlin (between 1900 and 1910) Insect dealer
- Heinrich Michael Neustetter Insect dealer, Vienna
- Gustav Paganetti-Hummler as Zoologische Institut für Balkanforschung des Gust. Paganetti-Hummler
- Ludwig Parreys (1796–1879) Parreys lived in Vienna, where he was dealer in natural history objects. Trading as Ludwig and Joseph Mann, he supplied zoological specimens to many leading taxonomists whose collections are now conserved by natural history museums.
- Andrew Pritchard London
- Max Quedenfeldt Berlin insect dealer.
- Orazio Querci (and family). Butterfly dealer in Florence, Italy - collected extensively in Spain and Portugal also Cuba. Supplied butterflies to Roger Verity and European butterflies to R.C. Williams, Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia.
- William Frederick Henry Rosenberg (1868–1957) 57 Haverstock Hill, London fl. 1920s. Claimed to hold 5,000 bird species as scientific skins (and to be the largest bird skin dealership in the world). Supplier to museums and private collectors. Traveller.
- Karl Rost (Entomologe)
- Wilhelm Schlüter (Naturalienhändler) (1828-1919) in Halle an der Saale
- Gustav Schrader
- Paul Smart
- Southwick & Jencks’ Natural History Store Providence, Rhode Island
- Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn Marine specimens.
- Wilh. Steeg "Dr. Steeg & Reuter" after 1879. Crystallographic microscope slides.
- Alexandre Stuer(fl. 1890s-1920?) Paris mineral dealer. Owner of Comptoir Géologique et Minéralogique, 40, rue de Mathurins and at 4, rue de Castellane.
- John Crace Stevens Covent Gardens auctioneer.
- Georg Thorey - Hamburg pharmacist and beetle collector. Also sold beetles to other natural history collectors.[1]
- Johann Gustav Friedrich Umlauff (1833–1889) Proprietor of prominent Hamburg-based natural history and ethnographic dealership and associated museum.
- Unio Itineraria a German Scientific Society based in Esslingen am Neckar sold specimens as a dealership.
- Van Ingen & Van Ingen
- Jean Villet Cape Town
- Henry Augustus Ward Founder of Ward's Natural History Establishment in Rochester, New York.
- Rowland Ward London
- William Watkins Began trading in 1874 in Eastbourne. In 1879 the address was 36 The Strand, London. In 1907 the dealership became Watkins & Doncaster (1907). In 1937 ownership passed to Frederick Metté an expert on bird eggs.
- Frank Blake Webster's Naturalists Supply Depot 409 Washington Street, Hyde Park, Massachusetts
- Walter Freeman Webb (1869–1957) Shell dealer St. Petersburg, Florida
- Henry Whitely
- Bryce McMurdo Wright father (1814-1875) or son (1850-1895), both with same name and both dealers at 90 Great Russell Street, London. They dealt in minerals and fossils, ethnographic and archaeological objects.
- Bohuslav Železný Prague 1890-? Lepidoptera.
- Ludwig Anker (1822, Budapest -1887) Insektenhändler
- Mary Anning
- Andreas Bang-Haas
- Otto Bang-Haas
- Max Bartel (1879–1914) Berlin
- Glasmodelle der Blaschkas - Leopold und Rudolf Blaschka
- Ernst August Böttcher, born 14 June 1870 Naturalien und Lehrmittel-Anstalt Berlin C. 2, Brüderstrasse 15.
- August Friedrich Böttcher
- Adolphe Boucard
- Karl Friedrich Wilhelm Braun
- Antonie Augustus Bruijn Dutch East Indies
- Giuseppe De Cristoforis (Milan)
- Eduard Dämel Insect dealer in Hamburg.
- Entomologisch Institut Hamburg (E. M. Schulz) Hamburg 22, Hamburgerstrasse 45.
- Josef Erber Naturalienhändler
- Anton Hermann Fassl Naturhistorisches-Institut, 948 Zeidlerstrasse, Teplitz, Bohemia, Germany (now the Czech Republic)
- Václav Frič (1839–1916) Prag
- Rudolf Fuess
- Karl Ludwig Giesecke Mineral dealer in Copenhagen.
- Johann Cesar VI. Godeffroy The Godeffroy Museum and dealership.
- Johann Wilhelm Adolf Hansemann (1784–1862) German insect dealer
- Henry Heuland (1778-1856) London Mineral collector and dealer
- Alexander Heyne Berlin
- Adam August Krantz (1809–1872); Natural history dealer in Berlin after 1850 in Bonn.
- Friedrich Christian Meuschen
- Benjamin Leadbeater (1760–1837) Dealer in ornithological specimens.
- Heinrich Benno Möschler
- Ida Laura Pfeiffer
- Edmund Reitter "Natural History Institute" 1879 -1880 Vienna, 1881-1891 Mödling, after 1891 Paskau and Munich (extant).
- Carl Ribbe
- Heinrich Ribbe (1832–1898) Entomologist and dealer in Berlin
- Hermann Rolle Berlin
- Emil Adolf Rossmässler Natural History dealer
- Fritz Rühl
- Auguste Sallé
- L.W. Schaufuß else E. Klocke, Dresden
- Christian Julius Wilhelm Schiede
- Gustav Schneider (1867–1958) Basel
- Emanuel Sweerts (1552–1612) Dutch merchant and natural history dealer.
- Rudolf Tancré (1842–1934) Anklam, Pomerania Dealer in Lepidoptera mainly of Central Asia and Siberia.
- Jules Verreaux Owner of Maison Verreaux, established in 1803 by his father, Jacques Philippe Verreaux, at Place des Vosges in Paris, which was the earliest known company that dealt with objects of natural history.
- Voigt & Hochgesang Göttingen
- Józef Warszewicz Guatemala 1844-1850
- White Watson
- Emil Weiske Saalfeld Insect and bird collector and dealer.
- Rudolf Zimmermann (1878–1943) mineralogist and dealer in natural history specimens for schools based in Chemnitz, Saxony. Author of Die Mineralien. Eine Anleitung zum Sammeln und Bestimmen derselben nebst einer Beschreibung der wichtigsten Arten
- ↑ Lynn K. Nyhart "Civic and economic zoology in nineteenth-century Germany: The "Living communities"of Karl Mobius" Isis 4 (1998)pp. 605-630