Symbolorum et emblematum ex re herbaria desmumtorum centuria una collecta. Frankfurt, Johann Ammonius, 1654

£2,500 · Offered by Maggs Bros Ltd

The 19th century botanist George Bentham’s copy of a collected edition of the first work to treat natural history in emblematic form. The 400 emblems are derived from nature and represent plants and flowers, quadrapeds, birds and insects, fish, sea creatures and serpents. Each emblem is accompanied by explanatory texts influenced by the hieroglyphic studies of the Renaissance coupled with Camerarius’ understanding of nature based on Pliny and other classical authors. The physician Joachim Camerarius (1534-1598) cultivated a large botanical garden in Nuremberg and many of the specimens which are represented here are taken from plants that he had grown. The emblems have been attributed to Hans Sibmacher or Hans Schroder. The four parts were first published separately from 1590-1604 and the first collected edition had a new general title-page dated 1605 and dedication. This edition is dedicated to Karl Ludwig, Elector Palatine of the Rhine and has been reset, the plates touched up and now within a rectangle and sometimes a typographical border. A little spotted and browned in places due to paper quality. Provenance: George Bentham (1800-84), with his gilt signature stamp on the front cover and the pencil signature inside the front cover. Bentham, nephew of Jeremy Bentham, was an English botanist and has been described as the “premier systematic botanist of the 19th century”. He was author of a number of botanical works and is best known for his collaboration with Joseph Dalton H

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