Everything about Flora Londinensis totally explained
Flora Londinensis is a book that described the
flora found in the
London region of the mid eighteenth century. The flora was published by
William Curtis in six large volumes. The descriptions of the plants included hand coloured
copperplate prints by
botanical artists such as
James Sowerby,
Sydenham Edwards and
William Kilburn.
The full title of the book is
Flora Londinensis, or, Plates and descriptions of such plants as grow wild in the environs of London. The first volume was produced in 1777 and the final one, containing a title and an index, was published in 1798. A binary name is given for each species in the survey, common and other names are also ascribed for the general reader. The remarkable aspect of the volumes was their accessibility. Previous works on the flora of Britain had been intended for the audience of scientists, apothecaries, and the earlier herbalists. The appealing plates also provided a careful botanical detail which coud assist in the identification of a species.
Curtis was
praefectus horti (Director, Society of Apothecaries) at the
Chelsea Physic Garden and a botanist with a broad knowledge of exotic species. However,
Flora Londinensis was to cover the most familiar territory of its author. Curtis intended documenting the flowering species within a 10 mile radius of London, commissioning several painters cum illustrators to produce hand-coloured copper engravings to accompany the pages. He undertook writing descriptions, publishing, and sales of the volumes; producing six
fascicles of twelve issues, each containing six plates. The final survey eventually came to include many species found in southern
England and a few more besides.
Despite praise for the importance of the volumes, the work wasn't produced beyond 300 copies. Many other works were to be issued, the economics of producing a more affordable volume were yet to be refined. The publication by Curtis,
The Botanical Magazine was to be a greater financial success. Sowerby, who helped to publish the volumes and give over seventy of the plates, would go on to produce natural history publications in a similar format.
The work was enlarged by
William J. Hooker, who published an edition with his own text in 1817 and 1828. This enlargement was even more comprehensive, by including species from the other
British Isles.
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