DOI: 10.56679/balkar.1922640 ISSN: 2667-470X

Entomologist Viktor Apfelbeck and the Beetle Sale Affair in Habsburg Bosnia or How Balkan Entomological Material Ended Up in European Collections

Amila Kasumović, Adnan Kaljanac
The historiography of the Provincial Museum in Sarajevo has extensively examined its cultural and scientific activities and its role in producing colonial knowledge, focusing mainly on ethnography, history, and archaeology. Less attention has been paid to the natural sciences and to questions of ethics in collecting practices. Drawing on unpublished archival sources, memoirs, and contemporary newspaper articles, this paper explores ethical issues surrounding the collection and trade of historical, cultural, and natural artifacts in Bosnia and Herzegovina during Austro-Hungarian rule (1878–1918). Particular attention is given to the 1911 insect sale affair involving Viktor Apfelbeck, a long-serving curator of the Provincial Museum. The study examines ethical concerns related to the collection, classification, and commercialization of natural specimens from Bosnia and the Balkans. It also analyzes the response of the Provincial Government to the identified irregularities and breach of official duty, as well as reactions within the public sphere of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

More from our Archive