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  1. 631 taxon names authored by Charles Lucien Bonaparte; Eponyms (List may be incomplete) 10 eponyms of Charles Lucien Bonaparte; Publications [edit] (List may be incomplete) 1825 [edit] Bonaparte, C.L. 1825. American ornithology; or, The natural history of birds inhabiting the United States, not given by Wilson. Carey, Lea & Carey.

  2. Charles Lucien Jules Laurent Bonaparte, född 24 maj 1803 i Paris, död 29 juli 1857 i Paris, [8] var en fransk naturforskare och ornitolog. Han var prins av Musignano och Canino, son till Lucien Bonaparte och därmed brorson till kejsar Napoleon I .

  3. United States in this period, the name of Charles Lucien Jules Laurent Bonaparte is the most prom-inent. He was born in Paris on May 24, 1803, the eldest son of Lucien Bonaparte, a younger brother of Napoleon I.3 Lucien had earned the displeasure of the emperor by marrying against his wishes. In 1804 he and his family fled to Rome, where they

  4. Charles Lucien Jules Laurent Bonaparte (1803–1857), ornithologist and politician, married Princess Zénaïde Bonaparte (1801–1854) Joseph Lucien Charles Napoléon Bonaparte (1824–1865) Alexandrine Gertrude Zénaïde Bonaparte (1826–1828)

  5. Luciano Napoleón Bonaparte. Luciano Luis José Napoleón Bonaparte ( Lucien Louis Joseph Napoleon Bonaparte, en francés; Roma, 15 de noviembre de 1828 - Roma, 19 de noviembre de 1895), IV Príncipe de Canino y Musignano y Cardenal francés de la Iglesia Romana. Hijo de los Príncipes Carlos Luciano y Zenaida Bonaparte .

  6. Bonaparte, Charles Lucien Jules Laurent (France-Italy 1803-1857) ornithology, systematics. Though he was never entirely able to divorce himself from his family's association with politics, Charles Lucien "Prince" Bonaparte lived a life in good part devoted to science. He was in fact quite an excellent zoologist, giving the majority of his ...

  7. 12 de jun. de 2000 · In a clear, precise, and witty manner, she conveys the life of Charles-Lucien Bonaparte (1803-57)from birth to death through his own letters and publications and through the letters and correspondence of his contemporaries: Agassiz, Audubon, Gould, Huxley, Owen, Say. and many other great naturalists of the 19th century.

    • Patricia Tyson Stroud