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|death_place = Cambridge, England |citizenship = United Kingdom |nationality = British |ethnicity = English |field = Botany |work_institutions = University of Cambridge}} Richard Bradley FRS (1688 – 5 November 1732) was an English naturalist specialising in botany. He published important works on ecology, horticulture, and natural history. ==Biography== Little is known about Bradley's childhood aside from an early interest in gardening and the fact that he lived in the vicinity of London, a city at the time with many amateur naturalists.〔Egerton, Frank. "A History of the Ecological Sciences, Part 20: Richard Bradley, Entrepreneurial Naturalist." ''Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America''. (April 2006): 117–127. Print.〕 Though Bradley lacked a university education, his first publication, ''Treatise of Succulent Plants'', gained him traction with influential patrons like James Petiver and later, Hans Sloane.〔Thomas, H. Hamshaw. "Richard Bradley, an Early Eighteenth Century Biologist ()." ''Bulletin of the British Society for the History of Science''. 1.7 (May 1952): 176–178. Print.〕 With their support, he was proposed and elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1712, at the age of 24. In 1714, Bradley visited the Netherlands and took an interest in horticulture. He spent the next decade back in England writing treatises on topics related to this central interest, like weather, fertiliser, productivity, and plant hybridisation. In recognition of his work in the field and with the (thereafter unfulfilled) promise that he would found and fund a university botanical garden, the University of Cambridge named Bradley its first professor of botany in 1724, a position he would hold until his death. As Bradley was not a wealthy man in his later life, and as this was an unsalaried position, the newly minted academic continued to focus most of his efforts on making a living through publishing. According to his rival and successor, John Martyn, as well as his successor, son Thomas Martyn, Bradley did this at the expense of his students, whom he reportedly neglected to even lecture to.〔The latter Martyn ended up establishing the first Cambridge University Botanic Garden, though the garden as it is known today was founded by the fourth Professor of Botany at Cambridge.〕 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「Richard Bradley (botanist)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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