Herbarium. Klaus H. Carl
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Herbarium
Publisher’s note: The plates printed here come from the Hortus Eystettensis of Basilius Besler published for the first time in 1613.
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Biography
Helianthus annuus
Sunflower
Compositae
1561: Birth of Basilius Besler, son of Michael Besler, in Nuremberg on the 13th February.
1586: Besler marries Rosine Flock.
1596: Second marriage to Susanne Schmidt. From his two marriages, Besler would have sixteen children altogether.
1589–1629: Besler manages the apothecary shop Zum Marienbild in Nuremberg. There he creates and maintains a botanical garden as well as a collection of curiosities (Naturalienkabinett).
1597: The bishop of Eichstatt commissions Besler to create a botanical garden at Willibaldsburg. He designs a garden of one hectare comprising eight terraces. To realise this, Besler turns to the botanists Charles de l’Écluse, Joachim Camerarius le Jeune and Ludwig Jungermann for help.
Following this, Besler undertakes an inventory of the rare and little-known plants of the time.
Introductory plate: Portrait of Basilius Besler
1607: Birth of his nephew Michel-Basile Besler.
1613: Besler publishes his Hortus Eystettensis in Eichstatt and Nuremberg. The work brings together 1,084 species of plants, classed in order of appearance according to the seasons, comprising 367 plates engraved using intaglio techniques, principally by Wolfgang Kilian. Printed in black and white, the herbarium was coloured by painters engaged by the richest buyers of the work.
1616: Publication of engravings of the rarest “products” of nature, which he had brought together in his collection of curiosities.
1627: Hieronymus Besler, Basilius’ brother, prints a new edition of the Hortus Eystettensis, a less lavish version with just 96 plates.
1629: Basilius Besler dies on the 13th March in Nuremberg.
1646–1648: Michel-Basile Besler publishes Mantissa ad Viretum stirpium Eystettense, as a complement and homage to his uncle’s Hortus Eystettensis.
A herbarium, or Hortus Siccus, is a collection of plants that have been dried and preserved so as to illustrate as far as possible their different characters. Since the same plant, owing to peculiarities of climate, soil and situation, degree of exposure to light and other influences may vary greatly according to the locality in which it occurs, it is only by gathering together, for comparison and study, a large series of examples of each species that the flora of different regions can be satisfactorily represented. Even in the best-equipped botanical garden it is almost impossible to have more than a very small percentage of the representatives of the flora of any given region or large group of plants. Hence, a good herbarium forms an indispensable part of a botanical museum or institution. There are large herbaria at the British Museum and at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, and smaller collections at the botanical institutions at the principal British universities. Linnaeus’ original herbarium is in the possession of the Linnaen Society of London. It was purchased from the widow of Linnaeus by Dr. (later Sir) J. E. Smith, one of the founders of the Linnaen Society, and after his death was bought by the society. Herbaria are also associated with the more important botanical gardens and museums in other countries.
Introductory plate: Hortus Eystettensis
Plantarum Horti Eystæt
Tensis
Claffis Verna
Introductory plate: Spring
I. Ruscus aculeatus
Butcher’s Broom
Liliaceae-Asparagales
II. Philadelphus coronarius
Double-flowered Mock-orange
Hydrangeaceae
III. Philadelphus coronarius
Single-flowered Mock-orange
Hydrangeaceae
I. Cercis siliquastrum
Judas Tree
Leguminosae-Caesalpinia
II. Maianthemum bifolium
False Lily of the Valley
Liliaceae
III. Botrychium lunaria
Moonwort
Ophioglossales-Pteridophyta
IV. Chrysosplenium oppositifolium
Golden Saxifrage
Saxifragaceae
I. Prunus specie
Double-flowered Cherry
Rosaceae
II. Prunus padus
Bird Cherry
Rosaceae
III. Picea abies
Branch and cones of the Norway Spruce
Conifer
The value of a herbarium is much enhanced by the possession of “types”, that is, the original specimens on which the study of a species was founded. Thus the herbarium at the British Museum, which is especially rich in the earlier collections made in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, contains the types of many species founded by the earlier workers in botany. It is also rich in types of Australian plants from the collections of Sir Joseph Banks and Robert Brown, and contains in addition many valuable modern collections. The Kew herbarium, founded by Sir William Hooker and greatly developed by his son Sir Joseph Hooker, also contains many types, especially those of plants described in the Flora of British India and various colonial floras. The collection of Dillenius is deposited at Oxford, and that of Professor W. H. Harvey at Trinity College, Dublin. The collections of Antoine Laurent de Jussieu, his son Adrien and August de St. Hilaire are included