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John Gerard

John Gerard (also John Gerarde, 1545–1612) was an English herbalist with a large garden in Holborn, now part of London. His 1,484-page illustrated Herball, or Generall Historie of Plantes, first published in 1597, became a popular gardening and herbal book in English in the 17th century. Except for some added plants from his own garden and from North America, Gerard's Herbal is largely a plagiarised English translation of Rembert Dodoens's 1554 herbal, itself highly popular in Dutch, Latin, French and other English translations. Gerard's Herball drawings of plants and the printer's woodcuts are mainly derived from Continental European sources, but there is an original title page with a copperplate engraving by William Rogers. Two decades after Gerard's death, the book was corrected and expanded to about 1,700 pages.

John Gerard
Frontispiece of 1636 edition of Herball
Born1545
Nantwich, Cheshire, England
Died1612 (aged 66–67)
London, England
Resting placeSt Andrews, Holborn
Other namesJohn Gerarde
Known forThe book Herball, or Generall Historie of Plantes
Scientific career
FieldsBotany
Author abbrev. (botany)J.Gerard

Life edit

Early life and education edit

Gerard was born at Nantwich, Cheshire, towards the end of 1545, receiving his only schooling at nearby Willaston, about two miles away. Nothing is known of his parentage,[1][2] but the coat of arms on his Herball implies he was a member of the Gerards of Ince.[3] Around the age of 17, in 1562, he became an apprentice to Alexander Mason (died 3 April 1574), a barber-surgeon of the Barber–Surgeon's Company (Company of Barbers and Surgeons) in London. Mason had a large surgical practice and had twice held the rank of Warden in the company, and later became Master.[3] Gerard did well there, and was admitted to freedom of the company on 9 December 1569 and permitted to open his own practice.[2][4] Although he claimed to have learned much about plants from travelling to other parts of the world (see for instance a letter to Lord Burghley in 1588), his actual travels appear to have been limited. For example, at some time in his later youth, he is said to have made one trip abroad, possibly as both a ship's surgeon and captain's lover on a merchant ship sailing around the North Sea and Baltic, for he refers to both Scandinavia and Russia in his writings.[2][5][6]

Later life, family and death edit

Gerard married Anne (or possibly Agnes), who died in 1620, and by her had five children, of whom only one, Elizabeth, survived them. He spent his entire adult life in London, close to Barnards Inn, between Chancery Lane and Fetter Lane. It is thought he resided in a tenement with a garden belonging to Lord Burghley. After his death in February 1612, he was buried at St Andrews, Holborn on 18 February, but the grave is unmarked.[2][3][4]

Career edit

Gerard had a successful career with the Barber–Surgeons' Company. He became a member of the Court of Assistants (board of directors) on 19 June 1595, despite being accused of defaming the wife of a colleague in 1578.[3] He was made an examiner of candidates for admission to the freedom of the company on 15 January 1598 and Junior Warden in August 1597, under the mastership of George Baker.[a] Following a further dispute with a senior warden, he relinquished his positions of "second warden and upper governor" on 26 September 1605, but this was resolved and on 17 August 1607 he was elected Master of the company.[1][3][7] In the Annals of the company, published in 1890, a biography of Gerard appears under a list of "Eminent Members".[6]

While studying he developed the tenement garden in the suburb of Holborn, London, which he refers to frequently in his work, and later published a catalogue of the flowers there. This became popular and he received gifts of seeds and plants from around the world. He also received offers to supervise the gardens of noblemen.[4] In 1577, he began work as superintendent at the gardens of William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley (Lord Burghley, the queen's Lord High Treasurer) at the Strand and Theobalds, Hertfordshire, a position he continued in for more than 20 years.[1][5] In 1586, the College of Physicians established a physic garden with Gerard as curator, a position he held till 1604.[2] In 1588, Burghley was Chancellor of the University of Cambridge and Gerard wrote to him commending himself as a suitable superintendent of the university botanic garden, writing "to signe for ye University of Cambridge for planting of gardens". Amongst his qualifications he wrote "by reason of his travaile into farre countries his great practise and long experience". There is no evidence for the travel claim and nothing seems to have come of his application.[8][9] By 1595, when he was appointed to the Court of Assistants, he had built up a reputation as a skilled herbalist and spent much time commuting from the Court to the garden he founded close to his cottage in Holborn, and also attending to his duties for Burghley. In 1596 he requested that the Barber–Surgeons' Company establish a physic garden ("Mr. Gerrard's garden") in East Smithfield, but this was not done.[2][3] It was reported that Queen Elizabeth held his achievements in high regard.[6] In 1604 he was granted a lease on a garden adjoining Somerset House, by Anne, the queen consort to King James I, but the following year relinquished it to Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, second son of Lord Burghley, in which he was described as "herbarist" to James I.[3]

According to Anna Pavord, Gerard was a doer and not a scholar.[5] Deborah Harkness notes that Gerard was not part of the community of Lime Street naturalists in London at the time.[10][b] His flawed (from the perspective of some of his contemporaries) Herball is dedicated to Burghley. He surrounded himself with influential friends and contacts, including Lancelot Browne, George Baker, and the apothecaries James Garrett, Hugh Morgan and Richard Garth. Garret was a Huguenot living and working in London, and a neighbour of the Flemish botanist Matthias de l'Obel (also known as Lobelius). Many of these had fine gardens and would exchange plants. Garth, who described Gerard as "a worshipful gentleman and one that greatly delighteth in strange plants" had South American contacts from where he would import rarities. He also exchanged plants with Clusius and cultivated a certain "Captain Nicholas Cleet of the Turky Company" from whom he obtained specimens from the Middle East. He would also visit other collectors and nurserymen such as Richard Pointer of Twickenham, Master Fowle, keeper of the queen's house at St. James and Master Huggens, keeper of the garden at Hampton Court. His servant, William Marshall travelled to the Mediterranean on his behalf and Jean Robin, the French king's gardener sent him seeds.[5] After his death in February 1612 he was buried at the parish church of St Andrews, Holborn.[4]

Work edit

Illustrations from the Herball (1597)
 
Virginia Potato
 
The Goose or Barnakle tree, that bears geese

Catalogue of Plants 1596 edit

Gerard's 1596 Catalogue (Catalogus arborum, fruticum, ac plantarum tam indigenarum, quam exoticarum, in horto Johannis Gerardi civis et chirurgi Londinensis nascentium) is a list of 1,039 rare plants he cultivated in his garden at Holborn, where he introduced exotic plants from the New World, including a plant he misidentified as Yucca.[12] The Yucca failed to bloom in his lifetime, but a pip taken from the plant later bloomed for a contemporary. To this day Yucca bears the name Gerard gave it. The list was the first catalogue of this type ever produced. The only known copy is in the Sloane collection at the British Library.[5] L'Obel wrote an introduction to the text. George Baker describes the garden in his preface to the Herball as "all manner of strange trees, herbes, rootes, plants, floures and other such rare things, that it would make a man wonder, how one of his degree, not having the purse of a number, could ever accomplish the same".[13] A revised edition in 1599 by John Norton, the Queen's Printer, placed the English and Latin names in opposite columns.[2]

Herball 1597 edit

The publisher and Queen's Printer John Norton proposed to Gerard an English translation of Dodoens' popular herbal, Stirpium historiae pemptades sex (1583).[14][15] This was a Latin version of an earlier work in Flemish by Dodoens, his Cruydeboeck (Herb Book, 1554). It had been translated into English in 1578 by Henry Lyte as A Niewe Herball and proved popular. Gerard was not Norton's first choice, the translation having originally been commissioned from Dr Robert Priest,[c][16][17][18][19] a member of the London College of Physicians,[8][20] who had meanwhile died. Although Gerard acknowledges Priest's role, he implies that he died before starting the work. As curator of the College garden, he would have been familiar with Priest and his work. The completed book appears to include much of Priest's work, with his own completion of the text in the form of annotations from his own garden, and for the first time, some North American plants.[21] An example is the first English description of the potato,[22] which he mistakenly believed came from Virginia, not South America (see illustration).[20] He then incorporated some unpublished material from L'Obel and material from the work of Clusius, which he rearranged to follow more closely L'Obel's scheme of his 1570 Stirpium adversaria nova.[5][8][23] It is thought to be a disguise for the original source.[24]

In the preface ("To the courteous and well-willing Readers"), Gerard acknowledged Priest's efforts, but claimed the work was his own;

"and since that Doctor Priest, one of our London Colledge, hath (as I heard) translated the last edition of Dodonaeus, which meant to publish the same; but being prevented by death, his translation likewise perished: lastly, my selfe one of the least among many, have presumed to set foorth unto the view of the world, the first fruits of these mine own labours"[25]

This led to Gerard being accused of plagiarism, and even of being a "crook".[5][15] The work, published in 1597, was his Great Herball, or, Generall Historie of Plantes.[26] This edition reused hundreds of woodblocks from Jacobus Theodorus Tabernaemontanus' Kräuterbuch or Eicones Plantarum seu stirpium (Frankfurt, 1590),[8][24] which themselves had been reused from earlier 16th-century botanical books by Pietro Andrea Mattioli, Rembert Dodoens, Carolus Clusius, and L'Obel. Gerard's lack of scientific training and knowledge led him to frequent inclusion of material that was incorrect, folkloric or mythical, such as the barnacle tree that bore geese (see illustration).[5][27] Nevertheless, the work, including over 1,000 plants in 167 chapters remained popular, providing in English information about the names, habits and uses ("vertues") of many plants known and rare.[15] It was seen as the best and most exhaustive work of its kind and a standard reference for some time.[6]

Publication controversy edit

Modern authorities disagree on how much of Gerard's Herball was original. Garret made a chance visit to the Norton publishing shop, where he discovered the proofs of the Herball and alerted the Nortons both to errors he discovered in the proofs and the incorporation of some of L'Obel's material.[5] This is recounted by L'Obel in his Stirpium illustrationes (1655),[28] which accuses Gerard of plagiarism.[15][29] Although the Norton firm was not concerned about plagiarism, it feared errors in a book that was supposed to be an expert reference guide. It hired L'Obel as an internationally recognised expert on plants, who as Gerard's friend had unwittingly contributed to his book, to proof the translations, fix the mismatched illustrations and right the textual wrongs. When Gerard discovered L'Obel's thankless efforts, he had him dismissed. Although Gerard was an experienced collector and plantsman, he lacked L'Obel's scholarship, as is clear in his dedication to Burghley, where he presents himself as a gardener.[30] Gerard dismissed L'Obel's criticisms as being due to unfamiliarity with English idioms.

Norton decided to proceed with publication despite these difficulties. He decided against using Dodoens' original illustrations since this would have revealed the actual source of the material, but instead rented woodblocks from Nicolaus Bassaeus in Frankfurt, about 1,800 in all, only 16 being original. However, Gerard was then faced with the difficulty of matching them to the text and frequently mislabelled them.[5]

Selected publications edit

  • Gerard, John (1876) [1596]. Jackson, Benjamin Daydon (ed.). A catalogue of plants cultivated in the garden of John Gerard, in the years 1596–1599/edited with notes, references to Gerard's Herball, the addition of modern names, and a life of the author, by Benjamin Daydon Jackson. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (2nd edition 1599)
  • Gerard, John (1597). The Herball or Generall Historie of Plantes (1st ed.). London: John Norton. (Internet Archive version: also here at Botanicus and here at Biodiversity Heritage Library)
    • Index p. 1392
  • Gerard, John (2015) [1633]. Johnson, Thomas (ed.). The Herbal Or General History of Plants. Originally published by Adam Islip, Joice Norton and Richard Whitakers in London (2nd ed.). NY: Dover. ISBN 9781606600801.
    • Index p. 1633
  • Gerard, John (1636) [1597]. Johnson, Thomas (ed.). The Herball, or Generall Historie of Plantes, gathered by John Gerarde, Master in Chirurgerie. Very much enlarged and amended by Thomas Johnson, Citizen and Apothecarye (3rd ed.). London: Adam Islip, Joice Norton and Richard Whitakers.
    • Index p. 1678

Legacy edit

After Gerard's death in 1612, an enlarged, revised and corrected edition of the Herball appeared in 1633[31] and as a third edition in 1636.[32] These were edited by Thomas Johnson, a London apothecary and botanist, commissioned by the heirs to the estate of John Gerard. Johnson's edition contained many corrections and new empirical observations. He added over 800 new species and 700 figures.[33] Through anecdotal comments, Johnson carefully distanced himself from the original. For example, he wrote of the entry on the saffron crocus, "Our author in this chapter was of many minds." The plant drawings in the 1633 and 1636 editions used hundreds of woodblocks originally made for an edition of Rembert Dodoens's original herbal, the basis of Gerard's work. These were shipped from Antwerp to London.[34] Johnson's revisions are the best-known versions, which most later authors refer to, sometimes called Gerard emaculatus[d] ("Gerard freed from blemishes"). Long ascribed this term to John Ray,[33][36] but it is thought to have been used earlier by John Goodyer and others.[37]

Gerard may be seen as one of the founders of botany in the English language, despite being ill-educated was more interested as a herbalist and barber-surgeon in the medicinal properties of plants than in botanical theory.[9] His botanical shortcomings were ascribed by critics in his own time,[38] including John Ray, who commented that despite the fact that the book was the standard botany text in the 17th century, it was by an ignorant man whose lack of foreign languages meant he could not have translated the work.[24] Because it was a practical and useful book, packed with helpful drawings of plants, and because Gerard had a fluid and lively writing manner, his Herball was popular with ordinary literate people in 17th-century England. Although scholars at the time recognised that it was a pirated work with many limitations,[24] there is evidence of the book remaining in practical use as a medicinal herbal even in the early 19th century. Agnes Arber notes how a man born in 1842 recounts that in his childhood there was still a woman who used the Herball for treating the ailments of her neighbours.[39]

Despite some shortcomings in Gerard's effort, Linnaeus honoured him in the name of the plant species Gerardia. Gerard's Herball references many of the poisonous plants mentioned in Shakespeare's plays. Additional value has been placed on the Herball by students of literature. For example, the herb which produces the deathlike sleep of Juliet or Cymbeline may refer to nightshade, Mandragora or Doronicum, all listed and described in the Herball.[40] The writer Mark Griffiths has claimed that the drawing of a man on the title page of the Herball depicts Shakespeare, but other scholars dispute this.[41]

The art of describing the natural world by direct observation divides Renaissance natural historians from their medieval predecessors, who were largely uncritical adherents of ancient texts. The earliest printed works in Renaissance natural history fell into two categories: 1. newly recovered, translated and corrected editions of ancient texts, and 2. herbals based on empirical knowledge of early botanists. Although Francis Bacon advocated inductive thinking based on observation or description (empiricism) as the way to understand and report on the natural world, the early Renaissance printed herbals were slightly modified adaptations of works by their medieval predecessors. These somewhat unscientific early scientists generally contented themselves with listing plants and occasionally other things like animals and minerals and noting their medical uses.[15][42]

John Gerard worked within the early wave of Renaissance natural historians, who sought to systematise natural history while retaining the works of the ancients.[42] The basis for Gerard's Herball and those of Dodoens and other herbalists was De Materia Medica of Dioscorides, an early Greek writer whose work was seen a definitive text, coupled with works by Gerard's contemporaries, the German botanists Leonard Fuchs, after whom Fuchsia is named, and L'Obel after whom Lobelia is named. Both Fuchs and L'Obel were early botanists who worked empirically with plants. They were well educated, as were other members of the "Lime Street community" in the City of London. Gerard and L'Obel were friends who made occasional field trips together.

The South African native botanical plant genus of Gerardiina was named after Gerard in 1897.[43][44]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Officers of the company were elected every year, with a Master and three Wardens, ranked from Senior to Junior.[7]
  2. ^ The Lime Street Naturalists were a group of naturalists, including plant enthusiasts and apothecaries, living in the vicinity of Lime Street, who exchanged correspondence amongst themselves and between themselves and like-minded naturalists across Europe.[11]
  3. ^ Presumably Dr Robert Preest (c. 1549–1596)
  4. ^ Also Gerardus Emaculatus and Ger. emac.[35]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Chisholm 1911.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Smolenaars 2008.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Jackson 1890.
  4. ^ a b c d EB 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Pavord 2005, Last of the herbals p. 331ff.
  6. ^ a b c d Young 1890, Biographical Notices pp. 540–545
  7. ^ a b Young 1890, Masters and Wardens p. 7
  8. ^ a b c d Raven 1950, p. 74
  9. ^ a b Walters 1981, pp. 8–9
  10. ^ Harkness 2007, pp. 51–55.
  11. ^ Harkness 2007, Living on Lime Street
  12. ^ Gerard 1876.
  13. ^ Gerard 1597, Baker: To the reader
  14. ^ Dodonaei 1583.
  15. ^ a b c d e Ogilvie 2006, p. 37
  16. ^ RCP 2009.
  17. ^ BHO 2004.
  18. ^ Barlow 1913a.
  19. ^ Barlow 1913b.
  20. ^ a b Grout 2016.
  21. ^ Claude Moore 2007.
  22. ^ Gerard 1597, Virginia Potato ii p. 781
  23. ^ l'Obel 1571.
  24. ^ a b c d Penny Cyclopedia 1836, in Botany pp. 243–254
  25. ^ Gerard 1597, To the reader
  26. ^ Gerard 1597.
  27. ^ Gerard 1597, The Goose Tree iii p. 1391
  28. ^ de l'Obel 1655, p. 2
  29. ^ Harkness 2007, pp. 15–19.
  30. ^ Gerard 1597, Epistle dedicatorie
  31. ^ Gerard 2015.
  32. ^ Gerard 1636.
  33. ^ a b Boulger 1892.
  34. ^ Vande Walle 2001, pp. 37–38
  35. ^ Lankester 1848, to Dr Sloane 16 March 1697 p. 313
  36. ^ Thompson 1974.
  37. ^ Gunther 1922, Gerard emaculatus p. 70
  38. ^ Harkness 2007, pp. 54–55.
  39. ^ Arber 1938, Conclusions p. 270
  40. ^ Tabor 1970.
  41. ^ Brown 2015.
  42. ^ a b Ogilvie 2006, pp. 6–7
  43. ^ Burkhardt, Lotte (2018). Verzeichnis eponymischer Pflanzennamen – Erweiterte Edition [Index of Eponymic Plant Names – Extended Edition] (pdf) (in German). Berlin: Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum, Freie Universität Berlin. doi:10.3372/epolist2018. ISBN 978-3-946292-26-5. S2CID 187926901. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  44. ^ "Gerardiina Engl. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  45. ^ International Plant Names Index.  J.Gerard.

Bibliography edit

Books and articles edit

Encyclopaedias edit

  • Encyclopædia Britannica. "John Gerard: English herbalist and author". Retrieved 1 November 2016.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Gerard, John" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Grout, James (2016). "John Gerard". Encyclopaedia Romana. University of Chicago. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  • Penny Cyclopedia (1828–1843). The Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. London: Charles Knight.

Websites edit

External links edit

  • Online Galleries, History of Science Collections, University of Oklahoma Libraries 14 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine – This site has high resolution images of works by and about John Gerard (in .jpg and .tiff format) and includes a copy of Gerard's 1597 Herbal in which the drawings have been coloured by hand.
  • Title page and selected woodcuts from a 1633 edition of Gerard's The herball, or, Generall historie of plantes (all images freely available for download in a variety of formats from Science History Institute Digital Collections at digital.sciencehistory.org.
  • Complete version of 1633 edition, fully-illustrated and in modern spelling, at the Ex-Classics website; can be read online or downloaded in text, pdf, or epub formats.

john, gerard, other, uses, disambiguation, also, 1545, 1612, english, herbalist, with, large, garden, holborn, part, london, page, illustrated, herball, generall, historie, plantes, first, published, 1597, became, popular, gardening, herbal, book, english, 17t. For other uses see John Gerard disambiguation John Gerard also John Gerarde 1545 1612 was an English herbalist with a large garden in Holborn now part of London His 1 484 page illustrated Herball or Generall Historie of Plantes first published in 1597 became a popular gardening and herbal book in English in the 17th century Except for some added plants from his own garden and from North America Gerard s Herbal is largely a plagiarised English translation of Rembert Dodoens s 1554 herbal itself highly popular in Dutch Latin French and other English translations Gerard s Herball drawings of plants and the printer s woodcuts are mainly derived from Continental European sources but there is an original title page with a copperplate engraving by William Rogers Two decades after Gerard s death the book was corrected and expanded to about 1 700 pages John GerardFrontispiece of 1636 edition of HerballBorn1545Nantwich Cheshire EnglandDied1612 aged 66 67 London EnglandResting placeSt Andrews HolbornOther namesJohn GerardeKnown forThe book Herball or Generall Historie of PlantesScientific careerFieldsBotanyAuthor abbrev botany J Gerard Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Later life family and death 1 3 Career 2 Work 2 1 Catalogue of Plants 1596 2 2 Herball 1597 2 2 1 Publication controversy 3 Selected publications 4 Legacy 5 Notes 6 References 7 Bibliography 7 1 Books and articles 7 2 Encyclopaedias 7 3 Websites 8 External linksLife editEarly life and education edit Gerard was born at Nantwich Cheshire towards the end of 1545 receiving his only schooling at nearby Willaston about two miles away Nothing is known of his parentage 1 2 but the coat of arms on his Herball implies he was a member of the Gerards of Ince 3 Around the age of 17 in 1562 he became an apprentice to Alexander Mason died 3 April 1574 a barber surgeon of the Barber Surgeon s Company Company of Barbers and Surgeons in London Mason had a large surgical practice and had twice held the rank of Warden in the company and later became Master 3 Gerard did well there and was admitted to freedom of the company on 9 December 1569 and permitted to open his own practice 2 4 Although he claimed to have learned much about plants from travelling to other parts of the world see for instance a letter to Lord Burghley in 1588 his actual travels appear to have been limited For example at some time in his later youth he is said to have made one trip abroad possibly as both a ship s surgeon and captain s lover on a merchant ship sailing around the North Sea and Baltic for he refers to both Scandinavia and Russia in his writings 2 5 6 Later life family and death edit Gerard married Anne or possibly Agnes who died in 1620 and by her had five children of whom only one Elizabeth survived them He spent his entire adult life in London close to Barnards Inn between Chancery Lane and Fetter Lane It is thought he resided in a tenement with a garden belonging to Lord Burghley After his death in February 1612 he was buried at St Andrews Holborn on 18 February but the grave is unmarked 2 3 4 Career edit Gerard had a successful career with the Barber Surgeons Company He became a member of the Court of Assistants board of directors on 19 June 1595 despite being accused of defaming the wife of a colleague in 1578 3 He was made an examiner of candidates for admission to the freedom of the company on 15 January 1598 and Junior Warden in August 1597 under the mastership of George Baker a Following a further dispute with a senior warden he relinquished his positions of second warden and upper governor on 26 September 1605 but this was resolved and on 17 August 1607 he was elected Master of the company 1 3 7 In the Annals of the company published in 1890 a biography of Gerard appears under a list of Eminent Members 6 While studying he developed the tenement garden in the suburb of Holborn London which he refers to frequently in his work and later published a catalogue of the flowers there This became popular and he received gifts of seeds and plants from around the world He also received offers to supervise the gardens of noblemen 4 In 1577 he began work as superintendent at the gardens of William Cecil 1st Baron Burghley Lord Burghley the queen s Lord High Treasurer at the Strand and Theobalds Hertfordshire a position he continued in for more than 20 years 1 5 In 1586 the College of Physicians established a physic garden with Gerard as curator a position he held till 1604 2 In 1588 Burghley was Chancellor of the University of Cambridge and Gerard wrote to him commending himself as a suitable superintendent of the university botanic garden writing to signe for ye University of Cambridge for planting of gardens Amongst his qualifications he wrote by reason of his travaile into farre countries his great practise and long experience There is no evidence for the travel claim and nothing seems to have come of his application 8 9 By 1595 when he was appointed to the Court of Assistants he had built up a reputation as a skilled herbalist and spent much time commuting from the Court to the garden he founded close to his cottage in Holborn and also attending to his duties for Burghley In 1596 he requested that the Barber Surgeons Company establish a physic garden Mr Gerrard s garden in East Smithfield but this was not done 2 3 It was reported that Queen Elizabeth held his achievements in high regard 6 In 1604 he was granted a lease on a garden adjoining Somerset House by Anne the queen consort to King James I but the following year relinquished it to Robert Cecil Earl of Salisbury second son of Lord Burghley in which he was described as herbarist to James I 3 According to Anna Pavord Gerard was a doer and not a scholar 5 Deborah Harkness notes that Gerard was not part of the community of Lime Street naturalists in London at the time 10 b His flawed from the perspective of some of his contemporaries Herball is dedicated to Burghley He surrounded himself with influential friends and contacts including Lancelot Browne George Baker and the apothecaries James Garrett Hugh Morgan and Richard Garth Garret was a Huguenot living and working in London and a neighbour of the Flemish botanist Matthias de l Obel also known as Lobelius Many of these had fine gardens and would exchange plants Garth who described Gerard as a worshipful gentleman and one that greatly delighteth in strange plants had South American contacts from where he would import rarities He also exchanged plants with Clusius and cultivated a certain Captain Nicholas Cleet of the Turky Company from whom he obtained specimens from the Middle East He would also visit other collectors and nurserymen such as Richard Pointer of Twickenham Master Fowle keeper of the queen s house at St James and Master Huggens keeper of the garden at Hampton Court His servant William Marshall travelled to the Mediterranean on his behalf and Jean Robin the French king s gardener sent him seeds 5 After his death in February 1612 he was buried at the parish church of St Andrews Holborn 4 Work editIllustrations from the Herball 1597 nbsp Virginia Potato nbsp The Goose or Barnakle tree that bears geese Catalogue of Plants 1596 edit Gerard s 1596 Catalogue Catalogus arborum fruticum ac plantarum tam indigenarum quam exoticarum in horto Johannis Gerardi civis et chirurgi Londinensis nascentium is a list of 1 039 rare plants he cultivated in his garden at Holborn where he introduced exotic plants from the New World including a plant he misidentified as Yucca 12 The Yucca failed to bloom in his lifetime but a pip taken from the plant later bloomed for a contemporary To this day Yucca bears the name Gerard gave it The list was the first catalogue of this type ever produced The only known copy is in the Sloane collection at the British Library 5 L Obel wrote an introduction to the text George Baker describes the garden in his preface to the Herball as all manner of strange trees herbes rootes plants floures and other such rare things that it would make a man wonder how one of his degree not having the purse of a number could ever accomplish the same 13 A revised edition in 1599 by John Norton the Queen s Printer placed the English and Latin names in opposite columns 2 Herball 1597 edit The publisher and Queen s Printer John Norton proposed to Gerard an English translation of Dodoens popular herbal Stirpium historiae pemptades sex 1583 14 15 This was a Latin version of an earlier work in Flemish by Dodoens his Cruydeboeck Herb Book 1554 It had been translated into English in 1578 by Henry Lyte as A Niewe Herball and proved popular Gerard was not Norton s first choice the translation having originally been commissioned from Dr Robert Priest c 16 17 18 19 a member of the London College of Physicians 8 20 who had meanwhile died Although Gerard acknowledges Priest s role he implies that he died before starting the work As curator of the College garden he would have been familiar with Priest and his work The completed book appears to include much of Priest s work with his own completion of the text in the form of annotations from his own garden and for the first time some North American plants 21 An example is the first English description of the potato 22 which he mistakenly believed came from Virginia not South America see illustration 20 He then incorporated some unpublished material from L Obel and material from the work of Clusius which he rearranged to follow more closely L Obel s scheme of his 1570 Stirpium adversaria nova 5 8 23 It is thought to be a disguise for the original source 24 In the preface To the courteous and well willing Readers Gerard acknowledged Priest s efforts but claimed the work was his own and since that Doctor Priest one of our London Colledge hath as I heard translated the last edition of Dodonaeus which meant to publish the same but being prevented by death his translation likewise perished lastly my selfe one of the least among many have presumed to set foorth unto the view of the world the first fruits of these mine own labours 25 This led to Gerard being accused of plagiarism and even of being a crook 5 15 The work published in 1597 was his Great Herball or Generall Historie of Plantes 26 This edition reused hundreds of woodblocks from Jacobus Theodorus Tabernaemontanus Krauterbuch or Eicones Plantarum seu stirpium Frankfurt 1590 8 24 which themselves had been reused from earlier 16th century botanical books by Pietro Andrea Mattioli Rembert Dodoens Carolus Clusius and L Obel Gerard s lack of scientific training and knowledge led him to frequent inclusion of material that was incorrect folkloric or mythical such as the barnacle tree that bore geese see illustration 5 27 Nevertheless the work including over 1 000 plants in 167 chapters remained popular providing in English information about the names habits and uses vertues of many plants known and rare 15 It was seen as the best and most exhaustive work of its kind and a standard reference for some time 6 Publication controversy edit Modern authorities disagree on how much of Gerard s Herball was original Garret made a chance visit to the Norton publishing shop where he discovered the proofs of the Herball and alerted the Nortons both to errors he discovered in the proofs and the incorporation of some of L Obel s material 5 This is recounted by L Obel in his Stirpium illustrationes 1655 28 which accuses Gerard of plagiarism 15 29 Although the Norton firm was not concerned about plagiarism it feared errors in a book that was supposed to be an expert reference guide It hired L Obel as an internationally recognised expert on plants who as Gerard s friend had unwittingly contributed to his book to proof the translations fix the mismatched illustrations and right the textual wrongs When Gerard discovered L Obel s thankless efforts he had him dismissed Although Gerard was an experienced collector and plantsman he lacked L Obel s scholarship as is clear in his dedication to Burghley where he presents himself as a gardener 30 Gerard dismissed L Obel s criticisms as being due to unfamiliarity with English idioms Norton decided to proceed with publication despite these difficulties He decided against using Dodoens original illustrations since this would have revealed the actual source of the material but instead rented woodblocks from Nicolaus Bassaeus in Frankfurt about 1 800 in all only 16 being original However Gerard was then faced with the difficulty of matching them to the text and frequently mislabelled them 5 Selected publications editGerard John 1876 1596 Jackson Benjamin Daydon ed A catalogue of plants cultivated in the garden of John Gerard in the years 1596 1599 edited with notes references to Gerard s Herball the addition of modern names and a life of the author by Benjamin Daydon Jackson London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link 2nd edition 1599 Gerard John 1597 The Herball or Generall Historie of Plantes 1st ed London John Norton Internet Archive version also here at Botanicus and here at Biodiversity Heritage Library Index p 1392 Gerard John 2015 1633 Johnson Thomas ed The Herbal Or General History of Plants Originally published by Adam Islip Joice Norton and Richard Whitakers in London 2nd ed NY Dover ISBN 9781606600801 Index p 1633 Gerard John 1636 1597 Johnson Thomas ed The Herball or Generall Historie of Plantes gathered by John Gerarde Master in Chirurgerie Very much enlarged and amended by Thomas Johnson Citizen and Apothecarye 3rd ed London Adam Islip Joice Norton and Richard Whitakers Index p 1678Legacy editAfter Gerard s death in 1612 an enlarged revised and corrected edition of the Herball appeared in 1633 31 and as a third edition in 1636 32 These were edited by Thomas Johnson a London apothecary and botanist commissioned by the heirs to the estate of John Gerard Johnson s edition contained many corrections and new empirical observations He added over 800 new species and 700 figures 33 Through anecdotal comments Johnson carefully distanced himself from the original For example he wrote of the entry on the saffron crocus Our author in this chapter was of many minds The plant drawings in the 1633 and 1636 editions used hundreds of woodblocks originally made for an edition of Rembert Dodoens s original herbal the basis of Gerard s work These were shipped from Antwerp to London 34 Johnson s revisions are the best known versions which most later authors refer to sometimes called Gerard emaculatus d Gerard freed from blemishes Long ascribed this term to John Ray 33 36 but it is thought to have been used earlier by John Goodyer and others 37 Gerard may be seen as one of the founders of botany in the English language despite being ill educated was more interested as a herbalist and barber surgeon in the medicinal properties of plants than in botanical theory 9 His botanical shortcomings were ascribed by critics in his own time 38 including John Ray who commented that despite the fact that the book was the standard botany text in the 17th century it was by an ignorant man whose lack of foreign languages meant he could not have translated the work 24 Because it was a practical and useful book packed with helpful drawings of plants and because Gerard had a fluid and lively writing manner his Herball was popular with ordinary literate people in 17th century England Although scholars at the time recognised that it was a pirated work with many limitations 24 there is evidence of the book remaining in practical use as a medicinal herbal even in the early 19th century Agnes Arber notes how a man born in 1842 recounts that in his childhood there was still a woman who used the Herball for treating the ailments of her neighbours 39 Despite some shortcomings in Gerard s effort Linnaeus honoured him in the name of the plant species Gerardia Gerard s Herball references many of the poisonous plants mentioned in Shakespeare s plays Additional value has been placed on the Herball by students of literature For example the herb which produces the deathlike sleep of Juliet or Cymbeline may refer to nightshade Mandragora or Doronicum all listed and described in the Herball 40 The writer Mark Griffiths has claimed that the drawing of a man on the title page of the Herball depicts Shakespeare but other scholars dispute this 41 The art of describing the natural world by direct observation divides Renaissance natural historians from their medieval predecessors who were largely uncritical adherents of ancient texts The earliest printed works in Renaissance natural history fell into two categories 1 newly recovered translated and corrected editions of ancient texts and 2 herbals based on empirical knowledge of early botanists Although Francis Bacon advocated inductive thinking based on observation or description empiricism as the way to understand and report on the natural world the early Renaissance printed herbals were slightly modified adaptations of works by their medieval predecessors These somewhat unscientific early scientists generally contented themselves with listing plants and occasionally other things like animals and minerals and noting their medical uses 15 42 John Gerard worked within the early wave of Renaissance natural historians who sought to systematise natural history while retaining the works of the ancients 42 The basis for Gerard s Herball and those of Dodoens and other herbalists was De Materia Medica of Dioscorides an early Greek writer whose work was seen a definitive text coupled with works by Gerard s contemporaries the German botanists Leonard Fuchs after whom Fuchsia is named and L Obel after whom Lobelia is named Both Fuchs and L Obel were early botanists who worked empirically with plants They were well educated as were other members of the Lime Street community in the City of London Gerard and L Obel were friends who made occasional field trips together The South African native botanical plant genus of Gerardiina was named after Gerard in 1897 43 44 The standard author abbreviation J Gerard is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 45 Notes edit Officers of the company were elected every year with a Master and three Wardens ranked from Senior to Junior 7 The Lime Street Naturalists were a group of naturalists including plant enthusiasts and apothecaries living in the vicinity of Lime Street who exchanged correspondence amongst themselves and between themselves and like minded naturalists across Europe 11 Presumably Dr Robert Preest c 1549 1596 Also Gerardus Emaculatus and Ger emac 35 References edit a b c Chisholm 1911 a b c d e f g Smolenaars 2008 a b c d e f g Jackson 1890 a b c d EB 2016 a b c d e f g h i j Pavord 2005 Last of the herbals p 331ff a b c d Young 1890 Biographical Notices pp 540 545 a b Young 1890 Masters and Wardens p 7 a b c d Raven 1950 p 74 a b Walters 1981 pp 8 9 Harkness 2007 pp 51 55 Harkness 2007 Living on Lime Street Gerard 1876 Gerard 1597 Baker To the reader Dodonaei 1583 a b c d e Ogilvie 2006 p 37 RCP 2009 BHO 2004 Barlow 1913a Barlow 1913b a b Grout 2016 Claude Moore 2007 Gerard 1597 Virginia Potato ii p 781 l Obel 1571 a b c d Penny Cyclopedia 1836 in Botany pp 243 254 Gerard 1597 To the reader Gerard 1597 Gerard 1597 The Goose Tree iii p 1391 de l Obel 1655 p 2 Harkness 2007 pp 15 19 Gerard 1597 Epistle dedicatorie Gerard 2015 Gerard 1636 a b Boulger 1892 Vande Walle 2001 pp 37 38 Lankester 1848 to Dr Sloane 16 March 1697 p 313 Thompson 1974 Gunther 1922 Gerard emaculatus p 70 Harkness 2007 pp 54 55 Arber 1938 Conclusions p 270 Tabor 1970 Brown 2015 a b Ogilvie 2006 pp 6 7 Burkhardt Lotte 2018 Verzeichnis eponymischer Pflanzennamen Erweiterte Edition Index of Eponymic Plant Names Extended Edition pdf in German Berlin Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Freie Universitat Berlin doi 10 3372 epolist2018 ISBN 978 3 946292 26 5 S2CID 187926901 Retrieved 1 January 2021 Gerardiina Engl Plants of the World Online Kew Science Plants of the World Online Retrieved 15 May 2021 International Plant Names Index J Gerard Bibliography editBooks and articles edit Arber Agnes 1938 1912 reissue 1953 Herbals their origin and evolution A chapter in the history of botany 1470 1670 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108016711 Barlow HM 15 March 1913a English herbals British Medical Journal 1 2724 557 558 doi 10 1136 bmj 1 2724 555 JSTOR 25300748 S2CID 220018269 Barlow Horace Mallinson 1913b Old English herbals 1525 1640 Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine London John Bale Sons amp Danielsson 6 Sect Hist Med 108 149 doi 10 1177 003591571300601512 PMC 2006232 PMID 19977241 Brown Mark 19 May 2015 Shakespeare writer claims discovery of only portrait made during his lifetime The Guardian Retrieved 22 April 2016 Boulger George Simonds 1892 Johnson Thomas d 1644 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 30 London Smith Elder amp Co Dodonaei Remberti 1583 1554 Stirpium historiae pemptades sex sive libri XXX Crvyd boeck in Latin Antwerp Plantini Harkness Deborah E 2007 The Jewel house of art and nature Elizabethan London and the social foundations of the scientific revolution New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9780300111965 see also The Jewel House Hoeniger F D Hoeniger J F M 1969 The Growth of Natural History in Stuart England From Gerard to the Royal Society Charlottesville Folger Books ISBN 978 0 918016 14 0 Jackson Benjamin Daydon 1890 Gerard John 1545 1612 In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 21 London Smith Elder amp Co Gunther Robert Theodore 1922 Early British botanists and their gardens based on unpublished writings of Goodyer Tradescant and others Oxford University Press Lankester Edwin ed 1848 The Correspondence of John Ray Consisting of Selections from the Philosophical Letters Published by Dr Derham and Original Letters of John Ray in the Collection of the British Museum London Ray Society also here at Biodiversity Heritage Library l Obel Matthias de 1571 Stirpium adversaria nova London Thomae Purfoetii de l Obel Matthias 1655 Botanographic Regii eximii Stirpium illustrationes plurimas elaborantes inauditas plantas subreptitiis Joh Parkinsoni rapsodiis ex codice MS insalutato sparsim gravatae Ejusdem adjecta sunt ad calcem Theatri botanici Auaptnuala Accurante Guil How Anglo in Latin London Tho Warren Ogilvie Brian W 2006 The Science of Describing Natural History in Renaissance Europe Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226620862 Pavord Anna 2005 The naming of names the search for order in the world of plants New York Bloomsbury ISBN 9781596919655 Raven Charles E 1950 1942 John Ray naturalist his life and works 2nd ed Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521310833 Raven Charles E 1947 English naturalists from Neckham to Ray a study of the making if the modern world Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108016346 Smolenaars Marja 2008 Gerard John Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 10555 Subscription or UK public library membership required Vande Walle W F ed 2001 Dodonaeus in Japan translation and the scientific mind in the Tokugawa period Leuven Leuven University Press ISBN 9789058671790 Tabor Edward 1 January 1970 Plant Poisons in Shakespeare Economic Botany 24 1 81 94 doi 10 1007 bf02860641 JSTOR 4253115 S2CID 36759773 Thompson Roger July 1974 Some newly discovered letters of John Ray Journal of the Society for the Bibliography of Natural History 7 1 111 123 doi 10 3366 jsbnh 1974 7 1 111 Walters S M 1981 The shaping of Cambridge botany a short history of whole plant botany in Cambridge from the time of Ray into the present century Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521237956 Young Sidney 1890 The annals of the barber surgeons of London London Blades East amp Blades Encyclopaedias edit Encyclopaedia Britannica John Gerard English herbalist and author Retrieved 1 November 2016 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Gerard John Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed Cambridge University Press Grout James 2016 John Gerard Encyclopaedia Romana University of Chicago Retrieved 3 November 2016 Penny Cyclopedia 1828 1843 The Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge London Charles Knight Penny Cyclopaedia vol V Blois Buffalo 1836 in Penny Cyclopedia 1828 1843 Websites edit Herball Generall Historie of Plants by John Gerard 1597 Introduction of North American plants into European herbals Historical exhibits What is an herb Claude Moore Health Sciences Library University of Virginia 2007 Archived from the original on 3 June 2020 Retrieved 3 November 2016 RCP 2009 Robert Preest RCP Munks Roll Lives of the Fellows vol 1 1518 1700 p 98 Royal College of Physicians of London Retrieved 4 November 2016 BHO 2004 Preest Robert British History Online Physicians and Irregular Medical Practitioners in London 1550 1640 Database Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 4 November 2016 External links editOnline Galleries History of Science Collections University of Oklahoma Libraries Archived 14 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine This site has high resolution images of works by and about John Gerard in jpg and tiff format and includes a copy of Gerard s 1597 Herbal in which the drawings have been coloured by hand Title page and selected woodcuts from a 1633 edition of Gerard s The herball or Generall historie of plantes all images freely available for download in a variety of formats from Science History Institute Digital Collections at digital sciencehistory org Complete version of 1633 edition fully illustrated and in modern spelling at the Ex Classics website can be read online or downloaded in text pdf or epub formats nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about John Gerard nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Gerard Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Gerard amp oldid 1186315303, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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