Background
Blandowski was born in Gleiwitz, Upper Silesia, Kingdom of Prussia (now Gliwice, Poland).
Blandowski was born in Gleiwitz, Upper Silesia, Kingdom of Prussia (now Gliwice, Poland).
He is known for his work in Australia from 1849 and 1859. In 1849 he moved to Australia where he made a small fortune in the goldfields near Castlemaine, Victoria. He was the first scientist appointed to the new Victorian Museum on 1 April 1854.
In 1856–1857 he led a scientific collecting expedition (the Blandowski Expedition) to the junction of the Murray and Darling Rivers, which procured a large number of biological specimens for the museum, especially new fish species.
However, a controversy ensued when two prominent council members felt insulted by his descriptions of the fish named for them:
lieutenant is not known if Blandowski"s insult was intentional, but it certainly led to substantial acrimony in the council. Blandowski refused to withdraw the descriptions or the paper in which they appeared, and was quickly censured by the council.
The insulted parties attempted to have him expelled from the Institute, but eventually withdrew themselves when they could not obtain the required two-thirds majority of votes. Blandowski remained active in the Philosophical Institute for the next three years, participating in the Exploration Committee that organised the Burke and Wills expedition.
He felt strongly that Victorians should be actively involved in exploring Australia.
Blandowski returned to Europe in 1859 and complained of his treatment in Australia. He died in Bunzlau (now Bolesławiec) in 1878. He is commemorated in a genus of marine fish (Blandowskius), and of the Murray River perches (Blandowskiella).
He later became a member of the Philosophical Institute of Victoria, a forerunner of the Royal Society of Victoria. Blandowski decided to name some fish species documented on this expedition after members of the Philosophical Institute"s council.