There were several systems that were proposed during that time, but Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778), a Swedish botanist and physician, published Systema Naturae (1735) which, along with a couple of later works, laid out the basic structure of modern taxonomy (kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species), beginning with plants. In the tenth, revised edition of Systema Naturae (1758), Linnaeus expanded his system into the Animal kingdom, to include Humans. In this work they were divided into the following groups:
- Europaeus: "sanguine" and "muscular" (whites)
- Asiaticus: "melancholy" and "stiff" (sallow/yellow)
- Americanus: "choleric" and "upright" (red)
- Afer: "phlegmatic" and "relaxed" (black)
- Ferus: "wild" and "hirsute"; ran about on all fours
- Troglodyte (classical name for cavemen)
- Monstrous: anything not fitting into the above categories, includes mutations, giants, etc.
Enter Johann Friedrich Blumenbach (1752-1840), who took issue w/Linnaeus' work and set about to revise it, rejecting portions of Linnaeus' system, and expounding on other portions of it. His revised racial system looked like this:
- Caucasoid (white)
- Mongoloid (yellow)
- American (red)
- Ethiopian (black)
- Malayan (brown)
Note also that the ranking is still not arbitrary. A race's position in the list is from highest to lowest level of quality.
The region which a race was identified with was thought to be that area in which the race originated, and also (very importantly) that area in which it was to be found in its most perfect form. Blumenbach associated the white race w/the Caucasus due largely to an account of a French traveller from nearly a century before by the name of Jean Chardin (1643-1713). In his accounts Blumenbach read of the perfection of the inhabitants of the region, and chose to associate the race w/that region.
One of the most important changes that Blumenbach's system made to Linnaeus' earlier one is that rather than identifying race largely w/culture, it identified it wholly w/anatomy. It relied largely on the pseudo-science of craniometry, also known as cephalometry, which involved cataloging skull measurements. This was to be something that was not wholly rejected by the scientific community until at least the 1940s, and indeed was a cornerstone of Nazi racial theories among many others.
So, there you have it.
Sorry this took a bit, but I got a bit sidetracked w/a discussion regarding Japan and the impact of Commodore Perry. :oops:
OTB