Nicholas Marcellus Hentz



Nicholas Marcellus Hentz (July 25, 1797 – November 4, 1856) was a French American educator and arachnologist.

Biography
Hentz was born in Versailles, France. He studied medicine and learned the art of miniature painting in Paris. An active Republican and participant in the French Revolution, he was banished from France upon the restoration of the Bourbons in 1815. He immigrated to the United States in 1816, and taught French and miniature painting in Boston, Philadelphia, and other places. In 1824/5 he was associated with George Bancroft in the Round Hill School at Northampton, Massachusetts. From 1826 to 1830, he was professor of modern languages and belles lettres in the University of North Carolina.

He married Caroline Lee Whiting in 1824, and moved with his wife to Covington, Kentucky, in 1831. In the following year they took charge of a female seminary near Cincinnati. They afterward conducted various schools in Alabama and Georgia. In 1851, they moved to Marianna, Florida, on account of the illness of Hentz. He died there.

Spiders
He became a pioneering zoologist in the field of arachnology.

He first described 124 spider species, and, as is custom in binomial naming, species are noted with the name and year of the person who first classified them. A few spiders of note Hentz classified are the Yellow sac spider and the Southern house spider.