I think you have the name a little off. The butterfly genus wasn't named
after Fabricius, it was named
by Fabricius in 1807. I wrote an article on this issue titled
How Vanessa Became a Butterfly: A Psychologist's Adventure in Entomological Etymology which appeared in 1993 in
Names, the journal of the American Name Society.
The "Phanessa" idea is a corruption of a theory originally proposed by
Flora Gaines Loughead, who wrote one of the first baby name books published in the USA,
Dictionary of Given Names. Loughead actually said that
Vanessa was from Phanes, the name of an obscure god (NOT a "goddess" called "Phanessa"). I think her theory is unlikely, because Fabricius, as an educated scientist of his generation, would have simply used Phanes as the name for the genus of butterflies if he wanted to name them after the god, instead of altering that name to
Vanessa. It is much more likely that Fabricius named the genus after the character in Swift's poem, especially since this genus is most closely related to another genus called
Nymphalidae, and the character
Vanessa is called a "nymph" several times in Swift's poem.
This message was edited 8/24/2006, 2:41 PM