Father Jan Dzierżon (16 January 1811 – 26 October 1906) was a Polish priest, apiarist, inventor, and apiologist, famous for his discovery of parthenogenesis among bees, and for designing a movable-frame beehive.
Biography
Jan Dzierżoń was born on 16 January 1811 in Łowkowice near Kluczbork, in the Kingdom of Prussia. In 1822, he moved to Wrocław, where he completed a gymnasium. In 1833, he graduated from the Faculty of Catholic Theology of Wrocław University, and, in 1834, was ordained a catholic priest. In 1835, he took over a parish in Karłowice.
In his apiary, Dzierżon studied the social life of the honeybees and constructed several experimental beehives. In 1840, he invented a movable-frame beehive, which allowed manipulation of individual honeycombs without destroying the structure of the hive. His design quickly gained popularity in Central Europe.
In 1845, Dzierżon discovered, that the drones are produced from unfertilized eggs. His results caused a revolution in bee crossbreeding. In 1854, he discovered the mechanism of secretion of the royal jelly and its role in the development of queens.
In 1872, Dzierżon received a honoris causa doctorate from the University of Munich. In 1874, he moved back to Łowkowice, where he died on 26 October 1906, at the age of 95.
Legacy
Jan Dzierżon is the father of modern apiology and apiculture. All modern beehives are descendants of his design.
In 1946, the town of Rychbach in Lower Silesia was renamed Dzierżoniów in his honour. In 1962, Jan Dzierżon's museum of apiculture has been established in Kluczbork.
Selected works
- 1847 – Theorie und Praxis des neuen Bienenfreundes (Theory and practice of modern bee-friend)
- 1852 – Nachtrag zur Theorie und Praxis... (Appendix to "Theory and practice")
- 1861 – Rationelle Bienenzucht (Rational apiculture)
- 1890 – Der Zwillingstock (Semi-detached beehive)