翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ English Bay
・ English Bay (neighbourhood)
・ English Bay (Vancouver)
・ English Bay Launch
・ English Bazar
・ English Bazar (community development block)
・ English Bazar (Vidhan Sabha constituency)
・ English Benedictine Congregation
・ English Benedictine Reform
・ English Bicknor
・ English Bicknor Castle
・ English Bill
・ English billiards
・ English Black Punk Metal/The Bones of This Land Are Not Speechless
・ English Border Front
English Botany
・ English Boy
・ English Boy (song)
・ English Boy Wonders
・ English Braille
・ English Brazilian
・ English breakfast tea
・ English brewery cask units
・ English Bridge
・ English Bridge (Saint Petersburg)
・ English Bridge Union
・ English Broadside Ballad Archive
・ English cadence
・ English Canada
・ English Canadian


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

English Botany : ウィキペディア英語版
English Botany

''English Botany'' is the title of a major publication of British plants, an enormous set of volumes that was issued between 1790 and 1813. The brief, but formal descriptions were supplied by the founder of the Linnean Society, James Edward Smith, and published and illustrated by the botanical illustrator and natural historian, James Sowerby.
The Periodical was published in 36 volumes over 23 years and was given the full title, ''English Botany or, Coloured Figures of British Plants, with their Essential Characters, Synonyms and Places of Growth'', the descriptions supplied by Sir James E. Smith were illuminated by Sowerby's 2,592 hand-colored plates. The volumes were issued by subscription, as a part work over 23 years, until its eventual completion in 1813. This amounted to 36 volumes which came to be referred to 'Sowerby's Botany', though somewhat erroneously.
While extensive, the work was never intended to be comprehensive; Smith would be the first to do such a survey with his first two volumes of ''Flora Britannica'' at the end of that century.
The descriptions given are accurate and systematic, in the use of binomial nomenclature, with Latin and English description; but a wider audience was intended with digression into general discussion and cultivation. Combined with increased sales of books, and the amateurs and gardeners enthusiasum for botany, the volumes were to become well known. Identification of the plants, in correspondence with the details in the plates, gave the work accuracy and utility beyond that of decorative books and more akin to formal botanical works.
Smith and Sowerby's partnering was not their only one, other early publication of Smith's descriptions with Sowerby plates, included ''Icones pictae plantarum rariorum descriptionibus et observationibus illustratae'' during 1790-93 and A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland, a survey of exotic species found in the new colonies of Australia. However, the first four volumes of ''English Botany'' came to be misattributed due to a request by Smith to remain anonymous on the title. Sowerby's name as the publisher, with a credit to himself as illustrator, allowed those enamoured by the novelety of his illustrations to perpetuate this misnomer. The title is still given in book sales as "Sowerby's".
The illustrations allowed a reader not familiar with botany to identify plants; also, the aesthetic appeal of the vivid hand coloured engravings earned Sowerby much praise. However, Smith was derisive of the ability of images alone to describe a plant. The graphics needed the formal description and explanation, without which only a 'superficial knowledge' could be gained from the text. Despite disagreement between the two men, they continued to issue the work: the absence of Smith's name in the title was corrected in later volumes and editions.
Considered to be the first extensive coverage of British flora, there was none of the kingdom

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「English Botany」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.