Plant buds and leaves
Date
1675
Creator
Unknown, Engraver
After
Marcello Malpighi (1628 - 1694, Italian) , Biologist
Object type
Library reference
54269
Material
Dimensions
height (page): 362 mm
width (page): 231mm
height (plate): 310mm
width (plate): 217mm
width (page): 231mm
height (plate): 310mm
width (plate): 217mm
Subject
Description
Sectional studies of buds and young leaves of various plant species viewed under magnification, including:
Figure 50 [several images, upper]: Fig tree, Ficus carica, Avellanus, Black mulberry, Morus, Oak, Quercus and Elm, Ulmus.
Figure 51 [several images]: Fig tree, Ficus carica, referred to by Malpighi as Ficu.
Figure 52 [lower centre]: Elm tree, Ulmus, referred to as Ulmo.
Figure 53 [lower]: Oak tree, Quercus, referred to as the same.
Figure 54 [lower]: Laurel, Laurus, and Persian apple, Persicum malum, referred to as the same.
Inscribed ‘TAB. X’ in the top right-hand corner.
Table 10 from Marcello Malpighi's Anatome plantarum; cui subjungitur Appendix […] (1675).
Marcello Malpighi (1628-1694), Italian biologist and physician, was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1669.
Figure 50 [several images, upper]: Fig tree, Ficus carica, Avellanus, Black mulberry, Morus, Oak, Quercus and Elm, Ulmus.
Figure 51 [several images]: Fig tree, Ficus carica, referred to by Malpighi as Ficu.
Figure 52 [lower centre]: Elm tree, Ulmus, referred to as Ulmo.
Figure 53 [lower]: Oak tree, Quercus, referred to as the same.
Figure 54 [lower]: Laurel, Laurus, and Persian apple, Persicum malum, referred to as the same.
Inscribed ‘TAB. X’ in the top right-hand corner.
Table 10 from Marcello Malpighi's Anatome plantarum; cui subjungitur Appendix […] (1675).
Marcello Malpighi (1628-1694), Italian biologist and physician, was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1669.
Object history
Anatome Plantarum was a much-anticipated work and, along with Nehemiah Grew FRS (1641-1712), earned Malpighi acclaim as founder of the microscopic study of plant anatomy.
His research was encouraged and supervised by the Royal Society, as evidenced by correspondence between him and the then-Secretary, Henry Oldenburg FRS (1619-1677) in the 1660s and 1670s [MS/103/1]. An abstracted version of his work in this area was first read at a Society meeting on 7 December 1671 [JBO/4, pp.216-217]. The full manuscript of Anatome Plantarum, together with the frontispiece artwork and these plates, was received and read on 28 January 1674/75 [MS/103/1-2].
It was ordered for printing by the Society’s printer John Martin in June 1675 [CMO/1/221]. The published work consists of the text of Anatome Plantarum, De ovo incubato, and 61 plates illustrating each [54 and 7 respectively]. A second part was sent by Malpighi to the Society in 1678 and published in 1679 as Anatomes plantarum pars altera [54271].
His research was encouraged and supervised by the Royal Society, as evidenced by correspondence between him and the then-Secretary, Henry Oldenburg FRS (1619-1677) in the 1660s and 1670s [MS/103/1]. An abstracted version of his work in this area was first read at a Society meeting on 7 December 1671 [JBO/4, pp.216-217]. The full manuscript of Anatome Plantarum, together with the frontispiece artwork and these plates, was received and read on 28 January 1674/75 [MS/103/1-2].
It was ordered for printing by the Society’s printer John Martin in June 1675 [CMO/1/221]. The published work consists of the text of Anatome Plantarum, De ovo incubato, and 61 plates illustrating each [54 and 7 respectively]. A second part was sent by Malpighi to the Society in 1678 and published in 1679 as Anatomes plantarum pars altera [54271].
Associated place