Sunday, February 28, 2021

15-16C Renaissance Scholars "Rediscover" Ancient Botany.

In the late 15-16C, Renaissance researchers "rediscovered" ancient botany. They produced editions of the works of some of the most famous ancient writers on botany: Theophrastus, Dioscorides, Pliny the Elder and Galen.

While Theophrastus’ Historia plantarum libri decem was published at Amsterdam in 1644 and edited by Robert Constantin (d. 1605). Dioscorides’ De Materia Medica. was attractive to Renaissance editors because it was considered more reliable because of the imprimatur it had received from Galen, practical because of its medical focus, and, finally, useful as an exemplar because it fit in well with emerging humanist methodologies. Most 18C physicians viewed it as their most important text on medical botany. Textbooks by Galen and Dioscorides dominated the botanical curricula of 16C medical schools.
John Gerard, The herball or Generall historie of plantes (London, 1633), details from title page. His Aldine edition of Aristotle’s works included Aristotle’s exploration of botany. Later Roman writers, such as Emperor Augustus’ doctor, Antonius Musa (fl. 23BC) and Emperor Nero’s contemporary Pliny the Elder (23-79AD) were also read in the 15-16C. Pliny the Elder’s Historia naturalis had been well known to humanists of the early 15C. Initially printed in 1469, the 1492-3 edition had caused a major debate within Renaissance scholarship on the veracity of the text.
Pliny the elder, C. Plinii Secundi historiae mundi libri XXXVII (Basle, 1539), title page detail. Although De herba vetonica was attributed to Antonius Musa it seems likely that it was in fact written much later than the 1C BC – recent commentators suggest it was the work of a 4C AD writer.
Antonius Musa, Ant. Musae de herba vetonica liber I. L. Apulei de medicaminibus herbarum liber I (Zurich, 1537), p. 1 detail.

French Woman Jeanne Baret (1740 - 1807) Sailed around the World - dressed as a Man - collecting Plants

 Jeanne Baret (1740 - 1807) portrayed in 1816 by an unknown artist

One of history’s most fascinating & botanists was Jeanne Baret, who became the first woman to circumnavigate the globe in 1769, collecting many unknown-to-Europe plant specimens along the way - all while disguised as a man.  

Baret was born to a peasant-class family in the historical Burgundy region of France. Her knowledge of botany stemmed from her work as an herbalist, & it drew the attention of botanist Philibert Commercon, for whom she worked as a housekeeper. 

At some point between 1760 and 1764, Baret became employed as housekeeper to Commerson, who had settled in Toulon-sur-Arroux, some 20 kilometres (12 mi) to the south of La Comelle, upon his marriage in 1760. Commerson's wife, who was the sister of the parish priest, died shortly after giving birth to a son in April 1762, and it seems most likely that Baret took over management of Commerson's household.

When Commercon was invited to join an exploratory expedition as the ship’s naturalist, the pair decided that Baret would go with him as his assistant, dressed as a man in order to get around the ship’s “no women allowed” rule. 

Jeanne Baret joined the expedition disguised as a man, calling herself Jean Baret. She enlisted as valet and assistant to the expedition's naturalistPhilibert Commerçon (anglicized as Commerson), shortly before Bougainville's ships sailed from France. According to Bougainville's account, Baret was herself an expert botanist.

Baret & Commerson joined the Bougainville expedition at the port of Rochefort in late December 1766. They were assigned to sail on the storeship, the Étoile. Because of the vast quantity of equipment Commerson was bringing on the voyage, the ship's captain, François Chenard de la Giraudais, gave up his own large cabin on the ship to Commerson & his "assistant." This gave Baret significantly more privacy than she would have had otherwise on board the crowded ship. In particular, the captain's cabin gave Baret access to private toilet facilities so that she did not have to use the shared head with other members of the crew.

In addition to Bougainville's published account, Baret's story figures in three other surviving memoirs of the expedition: a journal kept jointly by Commerson & Pierre Duclos-Guyot; a journal by the Prince of Nassau-Siegen, a paying passenger on the Boudeuse; & a memoir by François Vivès, a surgeon on the Étoile. Vivès has the most to say about Baret, but his memoir is problematical because he & Commerson were on bad terms throughout the voyage, & his account  is full of innuendo & spiteful comments directed at both Commerson & Baret.

Commerson suffered badly from both seasickness & a recurring ulcer on his leg in the early part of the voyage, & Baret probably spent most of her time attending to him. Aside from the ceremony of "crossing the line", which Commerson described in some detail in his memoir, there was little for the botanists to do until the Étoile reached Montevideo. There they set out on expeditions to the surrounding plains & mountains. Commerson's leg was still troubling him, & Baret seems to have done much of the actual labor, carrying supplies & specimens. In Rio de Janeiro – a much more dangerous place, where the Étoile's chaplain was murdered ashore soon after their arrival – Commerson was officially confined to the ship while his leg healed, but he & Baret nonetheless collected specimens of a flowering vine, which he named Bougainvillea.

After a second visit to Montevideo, their next opportunity to collect plants was in Patagonia while the ships of the expedition were waiting for favourable winds to carry them through the Strait of Magellan. Here Baret accompanied Commerson on the most troublesome excursions over rugged terrain & gained a reputation for courage & strength. Commerson, still hampered by his leg injury, referred to Baret as his "beast of burden" on these expeditions. In addition to the manual labor she performed in collecting plants, stones, & shells, Baret also helped Commerson organize & catalog their specimens & notes in the weeks that followed, as the ships entered the Pacific.

Surviving accounts of the expedition differ on when Baret's sex was first discovered. According to Bougainville, rumors that Baret was a woman had circulated for some time, but her sex was not finally confirmed until the expedition reached Tahiti in April 1768. As soon as she & Commerson landed on shore, Baret was immediately surrounded by Tahitians who cried out that she was a woman. It was necessary to return her to the ship to protect her from the excited Tahitians. Bougainville recorded this incident in his journal some weeks after it happened, when he had an opportunity to visit the Étoile to interview Baret personally.

In his account, Vivès reports much speculation about Baret's sex early in the voyage. Tahitian natives reported the presence of a woman in Bougainville's expedition to later visitors to the island, including James Cook in 1769 & Domingo de Bonechea in 1772, which indicates that her sex was known to the Tahitians if not to her shipmates at the time she visited the island.

After crossing the Pacific, the expedition was desperately short of food. After a brief stop for supplies in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia), the ships made a longer stop at the island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. This island, known as Isle de France, was then an important French trading station. Commerson was delighted to find that his old friend & fellow botanist Pierre Poivre was serving as governor on the island, & Commerson & Baret remained behind as Poivre's guests. Probably Bougainville also actively encouraged this arrangement, as it allowed him to rid himself of the problem of a woman illegally on board his expedition.

On Mauritius, Baret continued in her role as Commerson's assistant & housekeeper. It is likely that she accompanied him in plant-collecting on Madagascar & Bourbon Island in 1770–1772. Commerson continued to have serious health problems, & he died in Mauritius in February 1773. His financial resources on the island had dwindled, his patron Poivre had been recalled to Paris. Baret, meanwhile, seems to have established herself independently, being granted property in Port Louis, the capital of Mauritius, in 1770.

Baret helped to collect  more than 6,000 plant specimens on the voyage, frequently leading the field expeditions herself when Commerson was unable to due to poor health. She likely deserves credit for one of the expedition’s best botanical finds: Bougainvillea brasiliensis, a pink flowering vine native to South America. 

While Baret’s true identity was discovered 2 years into the trip, she wasn’t persecuted, likely because she had been such an asset to the expedition. Her accomplishments were given recognition over 200 years after her death in 2012, when the South American species Solanum baretiae was named in her honor.

1575 The Hortus Botanicus in Leiden

Johannes van Meurs, 1579-16 Leiden University Garden. Engraving after a design by W. Swanenburgh (1608), from Orlers (1614).

The Hortus Botanicus in Leiden was established soon after the founding of the university in 1575. The head of the early garden there was Charles de l’Ecluse or Clusius (1526–1609) , who had a wide network of correspondents across Europe & had written extensively on botanical subjects. In 1593, he brought with him from Frankfurt a great number of seeds, bulbs & plants to form the foundation of the garden, which had about 1,000 plants when it opened. Other distinguished botanists associated with the garden were Herman Boerhaave (1668–1738) & Johannes Fredericus Gronovius (1686–1762), an early patron of Carolus Linnaeus(Carl Linnaeus, Swedish Carl von Linné) 1707-1778, who would transform plant collecting with his uniform system for classifying them (binomial nomenclature).

In 1587, the young University of Leiden asked for permission from the mayor of Leiden to establish a hortus academicus behind the university building, for the benefit of the medical students. The request was granted in 1590, and the famous botanist Carolus Clusius was appointed as prefect. Clusius arrived in Leiden in 1593. His knowledge, reputation, & international contacts allowed him to set up a very extensive plant collection. Clusius also urged the Dutch East India Company to collect plants and dried plant specimens in the colonies. The original garden set up by Clusius was small (about 35 by 40 meters), but contained more than 1000 different plants.

The collecting of tropical (from the Indies) and sub-tropical (from the Cape Colony) plants was continued under Clusius' successors. Especially Herman Boerhaave (1668–1738, prefect from 1709–1730), contributed greatly to the fame of the Hortus with his efforts to collect new plants & specimens, and with his publications, such as a catalog of the plants then to be found in the Hortus.

Another major contribution to the collections was made by Philipp Franz von Siebold, a German physician who was employed on Deshima (Japan) by the Dutch East India Company from 1823 until his expulsion by Japan in 1829. During that period he collected many dried & living plants from all over Japan (as well as animals, ethnographical objects, maps, etc.), & sent them to Leiden.
Adriaan van Royen (1704-1779 Dutch physician and botanist

The 1st greenhouses appeared in the Hortus in the 2nd half of the 17C, the monumental Orangery was built between 1740-44. From its original plan the Hortus was expanded in 1736 by Adriaan van Royen & Carl Linnaeus.
Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) was a Swedish botanist, physician, & zoologist, who formalized the modern system of naming organisms as binomial nomenclature.

In 1817, the facility was again expanded by Theodor Friedrich Ludwig Nees von Esenbeck & Sebald Justinus Brugmans. In 1857, a part was used for building the new Leiden Observatory.

1770 The British Herbal, botanicals by artist John Edwards




























See Colonial Williamsburg here.

Basilius Besler (1561–1629) 1613 Herbal

Basilius Besler (1561–1629) was a respected Nuremberg apothecary & botanist, best known for his monumental Hortus Eystettensis. He was curator of the garden of Johann Konrad von Gemmingen, prince bishop of Eichstätt in Bavaria. The bishop was an enthusiastic botanist who derived great pleasure from his garden, which rivaled Hortus Botanicus Leiden among early European botanical gardens outside Italy.  The gardens surrounded the bishop's palace, Willibaldsburg, which was built on a hill overlooking the town. These gardens had been started in 1596 & designed by Besler's colleague, Joachim Camerarius the Younger (1534–1598), a physician & botanist. 

Upon Camerarius' death in 1598, Besler had the remainder of Camerarius' plants moved to Eichstätt & carried on the work of planting An early florilegium is Hortus Eystettensis ("The Garden of Eichstätt") by Basilius Besler contains 367 engraved plates depicting more than 100 flowers growing in the gardens created in Bavaria by Prince-Bishop Johann Konrad von Gemmingen of Eichstätt (1561-1612). 

In 1611, the Prince Bishop of Eichsttt in Germany knew he was dying, when he decided to record the exotic garden he'd created at his palace with plants from around the world. Eichstätt was the 1st major European botanical garden outside Italy In 1611, a visitor described the palace as being surrounded by terraced garden, “Each of the eight gardens contained flowers from a different country; they varied in the beds and flowers, especially in the beautiful roses, lilies, tulips." The bishop commissioned Besler to compile a codex of the plants growing in his garden, a task which Besler took 16 years to complete.
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613
Basilius Besler (German botanist, 1561–1629) Hortus Eystettensis 1613