Article ID: CBB054894983

Chronicling the Discovery of the British and Irish Native Floras – Richard Pulteney's Overlooked Contribution (2018)

unapi

Until 1897, when William Clarke produced his First records of British flowering plants, there was no publication where one could see the date and source of the discovery of all of the native plants in Britain and Ireland. Two manuscripts were traced in the library of the Natural History Museum, London, which are in the hand of Richard Pulteney, an apothecary and physician, and also author of works on Linnaeus and the history of botany in Britain. The first of these manuscripts, based on the second edition of Hudson's Flora Anglica (1778), traces each plant described in that work back to the earliest authorities; the second lists a single authority, as the ‘first describer or discoverer’ of each plant. Although Pulteney was handicapped by not having access to all of the pre-1640 literature, these manuscripts nevertheless represent an important contribution to the discovery of our flora, pre-dating, as they do, the work of Clarke by a century.

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Authors & Contributors
Nelson, E. Charles
Christina Harrison
Emer Lawlor
Pearman, David A.
McCracken, Patricia A.
Baijnath, Himansu
Journals
Archives of Natural History
Victorian Literature and Culture
Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society
Publishers
Kew Publishing
William Collins
Durban Botanic Gardens
University of Plymouth (United Kingdom
University of Chicago Press
Strawberry Tree
Concepts
Botany
Plant geography; flora
Horticulture
Flowers
Gardens
Plants
People
Banks, Joseph
Molyneux, Thomas
Murray, Lady Charlotte
Binks, John
Charlotte, Queen of Great Britain
Beare, Philip O’Sullivan
Time Periods
18th century
19th century
17th century
Medieval
Early modern
Modern
Places
Great Britain
Ireland
England
Amazon River Region (South America)
Scotland
Australia
Institutions
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Dutch East India Company
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