Bojanus was born at
Bouxwiller in
Alsace, to Johann Jakob Bojanus (1740–1820) and Marie Eleonore Magdalene Kromayer. His younger sister Louise Friederike (1789–1880) married into the influential Merck family of
Darmstadt. The family of Lutherans fled along with to Darmstadt during the French invasion of Alsace in 1789. He finished his secondary education in
Darmstadt and studied medicine at the
University of Jena (Dr. med., 1797). In 1804 he was appointed professor of
veterinary medicine at the
University of Vilnius, a post which he could assume only in 1806. In 1812 he fled to St Petersburg when Vilnius was invaded by Napoleon's army and returned only in 1814. Bojanus produced 70 works on anatomy and veterinary medicine with the most influential work being an illustrated book on the anatomy of
turtles,
Anatome Testudinis Europaeae (1819, 1821). This had 50 plates, illustrated on his own, on the anatomy of the European pond turtle
Emys orbicularis based on dissections of at least 500 turtles according to his student and biographer Adam Ferdynand Adamowicz (1802–1881). He initially considered dedicating the book to
Georges Cuvier but decided not to later, possibly due to the troubles he had faced from the French and due to his allegiance to Tsarist Russia. He printed 80 copies at a cost of 5000 rubles (about two years of his wages worth) which he paid for on his own, leading to financial difficulties. His student Adamowicz later became a veterinary professor at Vilnius. Other significant students included Karol Muyschel (1799–1843) and Fortunat Jurewicz (1801–1826). He made several discoveries, including a glandular organ in bivalve
molluscs that is now known as the
organ of Bojanus. He noted cercaria inside snails in 1818 and considered them as related to liver flukes but did not know about the life cycle. He described the
auroch species (
Bos primigenius) and the
steppe wisent (
Bison priscus) providing distinction between them. Bojanus married Wilhelmine Roose (1777–1826) in Vienna in 1803 and had no children of his own but had a stepdaughter Amelie (1819–1893). In 1814 he was elected corresponding member of the
Imperial Academy of Sciences in St.Petersburg; in 1818 he became a member of the
Imperial Leopold-Caroline Academy of Natural Sciences then in Bonn, and in 1821 was a foreign member of the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. == References ==