Catalogus plantarum, tum exoticarum tum domesticarum.... A catalogue of trees, shrubs, plants, and flowers, both exotic and domestic, which are proposed for Sale, In the gardens near London. Divided, according to their different degrees of hardiness, into particular books, or parts; in each of which the plants are ranged in an alphabetical order. To which are added, the characters of the genus; and an enumeration of all particular species which are at present to be found in the several nurseries near London, with directions for the proper soil and situation, in which each particular kind is found to thrive
Publication Details
London: [No publisher identified], 1730 CE.
A deluxe sale catalogue illustrated with 21 plates, including 7 mezzotints.
"The Catalogus Plantarum is notable as one of the earliest flower books to contain plates printed in colors. It is perhaps unique in that one third of its plates are so printed, in mezzotint from a single plate, while two thirds are engraved and handcolored in the usual way. The book is also unusual in that it was ostensibly the work of twenty authors, listed as the Society of Gardeners at the end of the Preface, though it is usually assumed that one of their number, Philip Miller, was responsible for the text....One intention of the Society was to agree on a nomenclature, so as to limit confusion in ordering plants; but that does not make it easy to translate into modern binominals. The present list of plants is offered as a means to a better one." (Hunt Botanical Library, No. 485)
Digital facsimile from the Biodiversity Heritage Library at this link.
Browse Tags
Thematic Classifications
| Catalog Metadata | Reference Information |
|---|---|
| Entry Number | #11974 |
| Permanent Link | https://staging.historyofmedicine.com/entry/14182 |
| Author Bio Link | Wikipedia ↗ |
| External URL | catalogus-plantarum-tum-exoticarum-tum-domesticaruma-catalogue-of-trees-shrubs-plants-and-flowers-both-exotic-and-domestic-which-are-proposed-for-sale-in-the-gardens-near-londondivided-according-to-their-different-degrees-of-hardiness-into-particular-books-or-parts-in-each-of-which-the-plants-are-ranged-in-an-alphabetical-order-to-which-are-added-the-characters-of-the-genus-and-an-enumeration-of-all-particular-speciesby-a-society-of-gardiners |
Geographic Context
Publication place: London