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Andrea Cesalpino

Andrea Cesalpino (Latinized as Andreas Cæsalpinus) (1524/1525 – 23 February 1603)[1] was a Florentine physician, philosopher and botanist.[2]

Andrea Cesalpino
Born(1524-06-06)6 June 1524
Arezzo, Republic of Florence
Died23 February 1603(1603-02-23) (aged 78)
NationalityFlorentine
Other namesAndreas Cæsalpinus
EducationUniversity of Pisa
Known forQuaestionum peripateticarum libri V (1569), De plantis libri XVI (1583)
Scientific career
FieldsMedicine
InstitutionsUniversity of Pisa, University of Rome
Author abbrev. (botany)Cesalpino

In his works he classified plants according to their fruits and seeds, rather than alphabetically or by medicinal properties. In 1555, he succeeded Luca Ghini as director of the botanical garden in Pisa. The botanist Pietro Castelli was one of his students. Cesalpino also did limited work in the field of plant and animal physiology. In medicine, he envisioned a "chemical circulation" consisting of repeated evaporation and condensation of blood, and for this reason historians have conceived him as a forerunner of William Harvey (1578–1657), who theorized the "physical circulation" of blood in 1628.

Biography edit

 
Statue of Cesalpino among the gallery of famous Tuscans in the Loggiato of the Uffizi, sculpted by Pio Fedi

Cesalpino was born in Arezzo, Tuscany. As it is reported by Giuseppe Lais and Ugo Viviani with a series of important documents, and recently confirmed in a scholarly volume devoted to Cesalpino, he was likely born in the Autumn of 1524 in the outskirt of Arezzo[3].[4][5]

For his studies at the University of Pisa his instructor in medicine was R. Colombo (d. 1559), and in botany the celebrated Luca Ghini. After completing his course he taught philosophy, medicine, and botany for many years at the same university, besides making botanical explorations in various parts of Italy. At this time the first botanical gardens in Europe were laid out; the earliest at Padua, in 1546; the next at Pisa in 1547 by Ghini, who was its first director. Ghini was succeeded by Cesalpino, who had charge of the Pisan garden 1554–1558. When far advanced in years Cesalpino accepted a call to Rome as professor of medicine at University of Rome La Sapienza and physician to Pope Clement VIII. It is not positively certain whether he also became the chief superintendent of the Roman botanical garden which had been laid out about 1566 by one of his most celebrated pupils, Michele Mercati. For the 1600 Jubilee, Cesalpino wrote a text on the history of the Church, entitled Historiae ecclesiasticae compendum usque ad Annum Jubilei MDC, kept as a manuscript at the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana in Rome (Vat. Lat. 35600), evidence of his orthodoxy.

Philosophical works edit

All of Cesalpino's writings show the man of genius and the profound thinker. His style, it is true, is often heavy, yet in spite of the scholastic form in which his works are cast, passages of great beauty often occur. Modern botanists and physiologists who are not acquainted with the writings of Aristotle find Cesalpino's books obscure; their failure to comprehend them has frequently misled them in their judgment of his achievement.

No comprehensive summing up of the results of Cesalpino's investigations, founded on a critical study of all his works has appeared, neither has there been a complete edition of his writings. Seven of these are positively known, and most of the seven have been printed several times, although none have appeared since the 17th century. In the following list the date of publication given is that of the first edition.

His most important philosophical work is Quaestionum peripateticarum libri V (1571). Cesalpino proves himself in this to be one of the most eminent and original students of Aristotle in the 16th century. His writings, however, show traces of the influence of Averroes, hence he is an Averroistic Aristotelian; apparently he was also inclined to pantheism, consequently he was included, later, in the Spinozists before Spinoza. A Protestant opponent of Aristotelian views, Nicolaus Taurellus wrote several times against Cesalpino. The work of Taurellus entitled Alpes cæsae, etc. (1597), is entirely devoted to combating the opinions of Cesalpino, as the play on the name Cæsalpinus shows. Nearly one hundred years later Cesalpino's views were again attacked by Samuel Parker, in a work entitled Disputationes de Deo et providentia divina (1678).

Cesalpino repeatedly asserted the steadfastness of his Catholic principles and his readiness to acknowledge the falsity of any philosophical opinions expounded by him as Aristotelian doctrine, which should be contrary to revelation.

Medical and physiological works edit

Cesalpino's physiological investigations concerning the circulation of the blood are well known, but even up to the present time they have been as often overestimated as undervalued. An examination of the various passages in his writings which bear upon the question shows that although it must be said that Cesalpino had penetrated further into the secret of circulation of the blood than any other physiologist before William Harvey, still he had not attained a thorough knowledge, founded on anatomical research, of the entire course of the blood. Besides the work Quæstionum peripateticarum already mentioned, reference should be made to Quaestionum medicarum libri duo (1593).

Botanical works edit

His most important publication was De plantis libri XVI (1583). The work is dedicated to the Grand Duke Francesco I de' Medici. Unlike the "herbals" of that period, it contains no illustrations. The first section, including thirty pages of the work, is the part of most importance for botany in general. From the beginning of the 17th century up to the present day botanists have agreed in the opinion that Cesalpino in this work, in which he took Aristotle for his guide, laid the foundation of the morphology and physiology of plants and produced the first scientific classification of flowering plants. Three things, above all, give the book the stamp of individuality: the large number of original, acute observations, especially on flowers, fruits, and seeds, made, moreover, before the invention of the microscope, the selection of the organs of fructification for the foundation of his botanical system; finally, the ingenious and at the same time strictly philosophical handling of the rich material gathered by observation. Cesalpino's selection of seeds and seed-receptacles as the primary criteria for plant classification heavily influenced the classificatory work of John Ray, a major seventeenth-century British naturalist.[6] After his death, an incomplete supplementary to this work, entitled Appendix ad libros de plantis et quaestiones peripateticas (1603), was published.

Cesalpino is also famous in the history of botany as one of the first botanists to make an herbarium; one of the oldest herbaria still in existence is that which he arranged in 1563 for Bishop Alfonso Tornabuoni.[7] After many changes of fortune the herbarium is now in the Museo di Storia Naturale di Firenze at Florence. It consists of 260 folio pages arranged in three volumes bound in red leather, and contains 768 species of plants. A work of some value for chemistry, mineralogy, and geology was issued by him under the title De metallicis libri tres (Rome, 1596). This mostly relies on the Vatican Methalloteca, and it was prepared by Mercati, who was unable to complete it due to his early death. Some of its matter recalls the discoveries made at the end of the eighteenth century, as those of Antoine Lavoisier and René Just Haüy, it also shows a correct understanding of fossils.

 
Cæsalpinia pulcherrima

The Franciscan friar Charles Plumier gave the name of Cæsalpinia to a plant genus and Linnaeus retained it in his system. At the present day this genus includes approximately 10 species and belongs family Fabaceae, subfamily Cæsalpinioideae, which contains a large number of useful plants. Linnaeus in his writings often quotes his great predecessor in the science of botany and praises Cesalpino in the following lines:

Quisquis hic exstiterit primos concedat honores
Cæsalpine tibi primaque certa dabit.

Geology edit

As mentioned above, De metallicis libri tres (Rome, 1596) was of value for mineralogy and geology, displaying a correct understanding of fossils. Charles Lyell's Principles of Geology states that in 1596,

Cesalpino, a celebrated botanist, conceived that fossil shells had been left on the land by the sea, and had concreted into stone during the consolidation of the soil."[9]

Sources edit

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Andrea Cesalpino". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

  1. ^ "Cesalpino, Andrea nell'Enciclopedia Treccani". www.treccani.it.
  2. ^ Isely, Duane (2002). One Hundred and One Botanists. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press. pp. 39–43. ISBN 978-1-55753-283-1. OCLC 947193619. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  3. ^ Lais, Giuseppe (1881–1882). "Atti dell'Accademia Pontificia de' nuovi Lincei. Sessione Va del 16 aprile 1882 … Documenti inediti di Andrea Cesalpino". Atti dell'Accademia Pontificia de' nuovi Lincei (30): 95–102.
  4. ^ "Vita e opere di Andrea Cesalpino". Libri antichi e rari (in Italian). Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  5. ^ Baldassarri, Fabrizio. "Andrea Cesalpino and Renaissance Aristotelianism". Bloomsbury. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  6. ^ Atran, Scott (1993). Cognitive Foundations of Natural History: Towards and Anthropology of Science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 161.
  7. ^ Baldini, Riccardo M.; Cristofolini, Giovanni; Aedo, Carlos (20 April 2022). "The extant herbaria from the Sixteenth Century: a synopsis". Webbia. 77 (1): 23–33. doi:10.36253/jopt-13038. hdl:10261/281248. ISSN 0083-7792.
  8. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Cesalpino.
  9. ^ Charles Lyell, Principles of Geology, 1832, pp. 30

External links edit

  • Some places and memories related to Andrea Cesalpino on Himetop – The History of Medicine Topographical Database
  • De plantis, 1583, on Google Books.
  • De metallicis, 1596, on Google Books.
  • De Metallicis Libri Tres – full digital facsimile at Linda Hall Library
  • Andrea Cesalpino entry (in Italian) in the Enciclopedia italiana, 1931

andrea, cesalpino, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2022, le. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Andrea Cesalpino news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Andrea Cesalpino Latinized as Andreas Caesalpinus 1524 1525 23 February 1603 1 was a Florentine physician philosopher and botanist 2 Andrea CesalpinoBorn 1524 06 06 6 June 1524Arezzo Republic of FlorenceDied23 February 1603 1603 02 23 aged 78 NationalityFlorentineOther namesAndreas CaesalpinusEducationUniversity of PisaKnown forQuaestionum peripateticarum libri V 1569 De plantis libri XVI 1583 Scientific careerFieldsMedicineInstitutionsUniversity of Pisa University of RomeAuthor abbrev botany Cesalpino In his works he classified plants according to their fruits and seeds rather than alphabetically or by medicinal properties In 1555 he succeeded Luca Ghini as director of the botanical garden in Pisa The botanist Pietro Castelli was one of his students Cesalpino also did limited work in the field of plant and animal physiology In medicine he envisioned a chemical circulation consisting of repeated evaporation and condensation of blood and for this reason historians have conceived him as a forerunner of William Harvey 1578 1657 who theorized the physical circulation of blood in 1628 Contents 1 Biography 2 Philosophical works 3 Medical and physiological works 4 Botanical works 5 Geology 6 Sources 7 External linksBiography edit nbsp Statue of Cesalpino among the gallery of famous Tuscans in the Loggiato of the Uffizi sculpted by Pio Fedi Cesalpino was born in Arezzo Tuscany As it is reported by Giuseppe Lais and Ugo Viviani with a series of important documents and recently confirmed in a scholarly volume devoted to Cesalpino he was likely born in the Autumn of 1524 in the outskirt of Arezzo 3 4 5 For his studies at the University of Pisa his instructor in medicine was R Colombo d 1559 and in botany the celebrated Luca Ghini After completing his course he taught philosophy medicine and botany for many years at the same university besides making botanical explorations in various parts of Italy At this time the first botanical gardens in Europe were laid out the earliest at Padua in 1546 the next at Pisa in 1547 by Ghini who was its first director Ghini was succeeded by Cesalpino who had charge of the Pisan garden 1554 1558 When far advanced in years Cesalpino accepted a call to Rome as professor of medicine at University of Rome La Sapienza and physician to Pope Clement VIII It is not positively certain whether he also became the chief superintendent of the Roman botanical garden which had been laid out about 1566 by one of his most celebrated pupils Michele Mercati For the 1600 Jubilee Cesalpino wrote a text on the history of the Church entitled Historiae ecclesiasticae compendum usque ad Annum Jubilei MDC kept as a manuscript at the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana in Rome Vat Lat 35600 evidence of his orthodoxy Philosophical works editAll of Cesalpino s writings show the man of genius and the profound thinker His style it is true is often heavy yet in spite of the scholastic form in which his works are cast passages of great beauty often occur Modern botanists and physiologists who are not acquainted with the writings of Aristotle find Cesalpino s books obscure their failure to comprehend them has frequently misled them in their judgment of his achievement No comprehensive summing up of the results of Cesalpino s investigations founded on a critical study of all his works has appeared neither has there been a complete edition of his writings Seven of these are positively known and most of the seven have been printed several times although none have appeared since the 17th century In the following list the date of publication given is that of the first edition His most important philosophical work is Quaestionum peripateticarum libri V 1571 Cesalpino proves himself in this to be one of the most eminent and original students of Aristotle in the 16th century His writings however show traces of the influence of Averroes hence he is an Averroistic Aristotelian apparently he was also inclined to pantheism consequently he was included later in the Spinozists before Spinoza A Protestant opponent of Aristotelian views Nicolaus Taurellus wrote several times against Cesalpino The work of Taurellus entitled Alpes caesae etc 1597 is entirely devoted to combating the opinions of Cesalpino as the play on the name Caesalpinus shows Nearly one hundred years later Cesalpino s views were again attacked by Samuel Parker in a work entitled Disputationes de Deo et providentia divina 1678 Cesalpino repeatedly asserted the steadfastness of his Catholic principles and his readiness to acknowledge the falsity of any philosophical opinions expounded by him as Aristotelian doctrine which should be contrary to revelation Medical and physiological works editCesalpino s physiological investigations concerning the circulation of the blood are well known but even up to the present time they have been as often overestimated as undervalued An examination of the various passages in his writings which bear upon the question shows that although it must be said that Cesalpino had penetrated further into the secret of circulation of the blood than any other physiologist before William Harvey still he had not attained a thorough knowledge founded on anatomical research of the entire course of the blood Besides the work Quaestionum peripateticarum already mentioned reference should be made to Quaestionum medicarum libri duo 1593 Botanical works editHis most important publication was De plantis libri XVI 1583 The work is dedicated to the Grand Duke Francesco I de Medici Unlike the herbals of that period it contains no illustrations The first section including thirty pages of the work is the part of most importance for botany in general From the beginning of the 17th century up to the present day botanists have agreed in the opinion that Cesalpino in this work in which he took Aristotle for his guide laid the foundation of the morphology and physiology of plants and produced the first scientific classification of flowering plants Three things above all give the book the stamp of individuality the large number of original acute observations especially on flowers fruits and seeds made moreover before the invention of the microscope the selection of the organs of fructification for the foundation of his botanical system finally the ingenious and at the same time strictly philosophical handling of the rich material gathered by observation Cesalpino s selection of seeds and seed receptacles as the primary criteria for plant classification heavily influenced the classificatory work of John Ray a major seventeenth century British naturalist 6 After his death an incomplete supplementary to this work entitled Appendix ad libros de plantis et quaestiones peripateticas 1603 was published Cesalpino is also famous in the history of botany as one of the first botanists to make an herbarium one of the oldest herbaria still in existence is that which he arranged in 1563 for Bishop Alfonso Tornabuoni 7 After many changes of fortune the herbarium is now in the Museo di Storia Naturale di Firenze at Florence It consists of 260 folio pages arranged in three volumes bound in red leather and contains 768 species of plants A work of some value for chemistry mineralogy and geology was issued by him under the title De metallicis libri tres Rome 1596 This mostly relies on the Vatican Methalloteca and it was prepared by Mercati who was unable to complete it due to his early death Some of its matter recalls the discoveries made at the end of the eighteenth century as those of Antoine Lavoisier and Rene Just Hauy it also shows a correct understanding of fossils nbsp Caesalpinia pulcherrima The Franciscan friar Charles Plumier gave the name of Caesalpinia to a plant genus and Linnaeus retained it in his system At the present day this genus includes approximately 10 species and belongs family Fabaceae subfamily Caesalpinioideae which contains a large number of useful plants Linnaeus in his writings often quotes his great predecessor in the science of botany and praises Cesalpino in the following lines Quisquis hic exstiterit primos concedat honoresCaesalpine tibi primaque certa dabit The standard author abbreviation Cesalpino is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 8 Geology editAs mentioned above De metallicis libri tres Rome 1596 was of value for mineralogy and geology displaying a correct understanding of fossils Charles Lyell s Principles of Geology states that in 1596 Cesalpino a celebrated botanist conceived that fossil shells had been left on the land by the sea and had concreted into stone during the consolidation of the soil 9 Sources edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Andrea Cesalpino Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Cesalpino Andrea nell Enciclopedia Treccani www treccani it Isely Duane 2002 One Hundred and One Botanists West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press pp 39 43 ISBN 978 1 55753 283 1 OCLC 947193619 Retrieved 4 December 2018 Lais Giuseppe 1881 1882 Atti dell Accademia Pontificia de nuovi Lincei Sessione Va del 16 aprile 1882 Documenti inediti di Andrea Cesalpino Atti dell Accademia Pontificia de nuovi Lincei 30 95 102 Vita e opere di Andrea Cesalpino Libri antichi e rari in Italian Retrieved 11 December 2023 Baldassarri Fabrizio Andrea Cesalpino and Renaissance Aristotelianism Bloomsbury Retrieved 11 December 2023 Atran Scott 1993 Cognitive Foundations of Natural History Towards and Anthropology of Science Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 161 Baldini Riccardo M Cristofolini Giovanni Aedo Carlos 20 April 2022 The extant herbaria from the Sixteenth Century a synopsis Webbia 77 1 23 33 doi 10 36253 jopt 13038 hdl 10261 281248 ISSN 0083 7792 International Plant Names Index Cesalpino Charles Lyell Principles of Geology 1832 pp 30External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Andrea Cesalpino nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Andrea Cesalpino Some places and memories related to Andrea Cesalpino on Himetop The History of Medicine Topographical Database De plantis 1583 on Google Books De metallicis 1596 on Google Books De Metallicis Libri Tres full digital facsimile at Linda Hall Library Andrea Cesalpino entry in Italian in the Enciclopedia italiana 1931 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andrea Cesalpino amp oldid 1220799509, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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