Botany in the West

Theophrastus — Observation as a Starting Point

The story begins with careful looking. Theophrastus frames plants as things that can be described, compared, and discussed with shared terms.

Dioscorides — Plants as Practical Knowledge

Plant knowledge travels through medicine. Dioscorides connects names, appearances, and uses, shaping how people recognize and trust plant information.

Fuchs — Seeing Plants Through Images

Printed herbals make plant knowledge more stable. With detailed illustrations, Fuchs helps readers match words to living plants across distances.

Gerard — The Herbal as a Shared Reference

Gerard gathers what scholars, gardeners, and apothecaries know. The herbal becomes a meeting point for names, habitats, and everyday uses.

John Ray — Consistency and “Natural” Order

Ray strengthens comparison and description. His work pushes botany toward more consistent groupings and clearer ideas of kinds and species.

Tournefort — Travel and Testing Old Names

Botany becomes fieldwork. Tournefort’s Levant journeys connect books to landscapes, checking plants on-site and bringing specimens back into European networks.

Linnaeus — A Common Language for Plants

Linnaeus standardizes naming. With binomial names and simple rules, plant knowledge becomes easier to share, index, and expand.

Jussieu — Families and the “Natural System”

Jussieu reorganizes similarity. Plant families become a new way to see structure in diversity and to connect many species under broader patterns.

de Candolle — Scaling Up to Global Catalogs

de Candolle turns classification into long-term infrastructure. Large catalogs and descriptions link collections, institutions, and authors across countries.

Want a deeper dive? Visit the Research Series for longer essays, primary texts, and guided reading paths.