TY - JOUR
T1 - Plants from abroad : botanical terminology in 18th-century British encyclopaedias
AU - LONATI, ELISABETTA
PY - 2013/1/1
Y1 - 2013/1/1
N2 - During the 18th century British encyclopaedias included in their lemmata an increasing number of botanical lexis, that is the terminology pertaining to “that branch of natural history which treats of the uses, characters, classes, orders, genera, and species of plants. […] and what useful and ornamental purposes may be expected from the cultivation of it [i.e. botany]” (Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1768-1771, s.v. BOTANY). More often than not, these terms represented migrating plants coming from exotic places, new geographical areas, whether eastwards or westwards.
The general aim of this survey is to investigate the representation of the botanical science in 18th-century universal and specialized encyclopaedias, starting from prefaces and going on with the micro-texts of the single entries s.v. BOTANY. The starting point is thus theoretical botany. A further point in the analysis focuses on applied botany and discusses those plants such as Camellia Sinensis, Coffea Arabica, Theobroma Cacao, Saccharum Officinarum and Cinchona Officinalis which were mostly exploited for commercial and/or medical reasons.
The individual entries include the most tiny details on the single headwords-topics and also display an acceptable plurality of beliefs, viewpoints and perspectives, focussing on botanical descriptions, historical information, socio-cultural issues, legal, political and commercial considerations.
AB - During the 18th century British encyclopaedias included in their lemmata an increasing number of botanical lexis, that is the terminology pertaining to “that branch of natural history which treats of the uses, characters, classes, orders, genera, and species of plants. […] and what useful and ornamental purposes may be expected from the cultivation of it [i.e. botany]” (Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1768-1771, s.v. BOTANY). More often than not, these terms represented migrating plants coming from exotic places, new geographical areas, whether eastwards or westwards.
The general aim of this survey is to investigate the representation of the botanical science in 18th-century universal and specialized encyclopaedias, starting from prefaces and going on with the micro-texts of the single entries s.v. BOTANY. The starting point is thus theoretical botany. A further point in the analysis focuses on applied botany and discusses those plants such as Camellia Sinensis, Coffea Arabica, Theobroma Cacao, Saccharum Officinarum and Cinchona Officinalis which were mostly exploited for commercial and/or medical reasons.
The individual entries include the most tiny details on the single headwords-topics and also display an acceptable plurality of beliefs, viewpoints and perspectives, focussing on botanical descriptions, historical information, socio-cultural issues, legal, political and commercial considerations.
KW - Botany
KW - materia medica
KW - applied botany
KW - economic botany
KW - 18th-century British encyclopaedias
KW - Linnaeus
KW - Botany
KW - materia medica
KW - applied botany
KW - economic botany
KW - 18th-century British encyclopaedias
KW - Linnaeus
UR - https://iris.uniupo.it/handle/11579/117219
U2 - 10.13130/2035-7680/3305
DO - 10.13130/2035-7680/3305
M3 - Article
SN - 2035-7680
SP - 20
EP - 38
JO - ALTRE MODERNITÀ
JF - ALTRE MODERNITÀ
IS - 10
ER -