Leonhard Fuchs's History of Plants (1542) - Renaissance Book-Printing and Botanical Illustrations
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Explore a fascinating lecture on Leonhard Fuchs's groundbreaking 1542 publication "History of Plants," delivered by renowned scholar Sachiko Kusukawa. Delve into the significance of this Renaissance masterpiece that featured over 500 detailed woodcut illustrations of plants, complete with morphological descriptions and medicinal applications. Learn how this work, while based on Dioscorides' classical text, broke new ground by acknowledging the artists responsible for its stunning illustrations. Discover how these botanical illustrations served multiple purposes in plant study and examine a special copy housed at the Linnean Society. Gain insights from Kusukawa, a distinguished fellow at Trinity College, Cambridge, whose expertise in scientific illustrations and recent publication on Andreas Vesalius's anatomical works brings depth to this exploration of one of botanical history's most important texts.
Syllabus
Leonhard Fuchs’s History of Plants (1542) | Sachiko Kusukawa
Taught by
Linnean Society