Az Egri Múzeum Évkönyve - Annales Musei Agriensis 6. (1969)
Szujkóné Lacza Júlia: Megemlékezés Andreánszky Gáborról (1895–1967)
Constantine, 6 May Hammam Meskoutine, 7 May Bone, 8 May Carthage, 9 May Djebel Bon Kornein, 10 May North African phytogeographical study trip II, 18 February —30 May, 1928. Phytogeographical study trip HI, to the environs of Oran and in Marocco, 5 May —2 July, 1930. (Together with zoologists, Professor Dr. Fr. Werner and Prof. Dr. R. Ebner of Vienna). Study trip to the Western Alps, 23 July —3 August, 1933. Maritime-Alps, Cottian Alps, Graian Alps (G. Andreánszky and Z. Kárpáti). Study trip to the environs of Geneva, the Jura and the Western Alps, 25 May —5 June 193S. Study trip to the Eastern Alps, 16—18 August, 1936. (G. Andreánszky and assistant J. Újhelyi.) Excursion trip to the Radnai Alps, 22—25 July, 1937. North African study trip IV. 6—28 April, 1938. Study trip to the Máramaros-Alps, Mt. Pop-Iván, 16—30 June, 1939. (With J. Tuzson, P. Palik, G. Andreánszky, J. Újhelyi, J. Bánhegyi, and several students) Study trip to Transylvania, 20—26 June, 1941, led by G. Andreánszky. (With P. Palik, Z. Kárpáti, J. Újhelyi, J. Bánhegyi, V. Modor, L. Apor, assistant I. Allodiatoris, L. Baksay). Szénafüvek, near Kolozsvár, 21 June. Korongyis, 22 June, Mt. Ünőkő, 23 June, environs of the Lake Gyilkos and the BékásPass, 25 June. Split, Yugoslavia, 1965. Vienna. Austria (Deutsche Zool.-Bot. Ges., 1964.) Zakopane, Poland, 1966. With respect to the study and collecting trips prior to his appointment as professor of the University, one needs only to add that G. Andreánszky took with him on his travels in Central Europa his less well-to-do colleagues as guests, J. Bánhegyi (Transylvania), Z. Kárpáti (the Lower Danube), J. Újhelyi (the Alps) were thus recipients of this noble and friendly gesture. I should like to express my gratitude, in compiling the material of this commemoration, to my colleauges J. Újhelyi and G. Fekete, as weul as to Anidreánszky's students, G. Cziffery and E. Horváth paleontologists, for their multiple assistance. T. Simon and A. Horánszky have kindly helped with documentary material deposited in the Phytosystematical Institute of the University. Let us now return to G. Andreánszky and see what kind of a man he was as a student, reserach worker, professor, colleague, museologist, and frien. J. Tuzson himself, as a research worker, belonged pricipally among the pragmatic and less to the descriptive investigators. In his entire outlook and works, and his appreciation of their thurst for knowledge, act as a magnet on the young and successions of the climate and vegetational formations appear highly differentiated. Geological and paleontological data both play their role in also the temporal location of the investigated vegetation. Tuzson's strict scientific demands, both against himself and his students, had always been retained in G. Andreánszky's works, together with the fundamental features of his outlook. In his student, this was further mated with an unappeasable desire for knowledge, an endeavour to obtain new informations, and a great physical and mental ability to work. As a result of his study trips to 10