THE ANCIENTS
One of the first documented efforts to systematize a local flora was that of Theophrastus (370 -285 B.C.), a Greek student of Plato and successor to Aristotle as director of the Lyceum and its botanical garden. His written botanical products, including "Inquiry into Plants" and "The Causes of Plants" provided, among other things, a systematic treatment of over 500 species ordered according to 'habit' (trees, shrubs, herbs, etc.) and separated according to flowering and non-flowering. A few generic names currently in use, such as Daucus (carrot), Asparagus, and Narcissus (daffodil), originated during this time. A Roman military surgeon, Dioscorides (1st century A.D.) later added about 100 additional 'kinds' or species from the Mediterranean flora and some illustrations to produce a similar document, Materia Medica, that described the plants and their medicinal applications. This included natural groupings of species that represent well-defined modern Families (Fabaceae, Apiaceae, Lamiaceae).
Intellectual stagnation of the middle ages resulted in minimal original work in plant systematics and much use of information developed by the early Greeks and Romans. However, Albertus Magnus (German - 1200-1280 A.D.) produced a classification system that recognized - for the first time - monocots and dicots.
THE HERBALISTS
The Renaissance was
an
active period of learning and exploration and, with the invention and
implementation
of the printing press (1440) many large volumes about plants and their
uses,
known as herbals, were produced throughout Europe for use - mostly - by
physicians.
Given the diversity of useful European plants, and the presence of new
species
from on-going exploration of the planet, the herbalists were forced to
extend
and enhance the initial efforts of the 'ancients' to structure and
order
flowering plant diversity. Many 'natural' and well defined genera
and
families were established during this period and plants were, for the
first
time, depicted via woodcut or metal plate engravings with key
characteristics
a featured element. Major herbalists include:
John Gerard - English (1542-1612) - The Herball, or, Generall Historie of Plantes (1597)
- Described by some as Rembert Dodoens’
Herball rendered in English. He plagiarized a manuscript by Dr.
Robert
Priest that was a translation of Dodoens’ Stirpium Historia
Pemptades
Sex, added 182 new plants, revised the arrangement, and
appended
his own observations. In a rush to publish, Gerard made a great number
of
errors in his first edition. Thomas Johnson, an apothecary, corrected
many
of these in a second edition published in 1633 and 1636.
Johnson’s
edition (a copy at the A&M Cushing Library) also used Christopher
Plantin’s
woodblocks which were superior to the blocks in the 1597 edition.
However,
Gerard's Herball became required
reading
by botany students for over two centuries
and formed part of
the
essential education of botanists well into the nineteenth
century. In
addition, Gerard produced the first description of the
potato -
one of the most economically significant plants to come from the New
World.
Leonhard Fuchs - German (1501-1566) - De historia stirpium (1542) - (and, in 1543, as New Kreuterbuch) based mainly upon Dioscorides, one of the first illustrated herbals that recognized the painter, the draftsman, and woodcutter for their contributions (portrait above was taken from the herbal). The illustrations, respected for their clarity and style, influenced botanical illustration for many years. A number of later herbals contain illustrations copied from Fuchs or were even printed from his actual blocks. The introductory chapter of De historia stirpium, "An Explanation of Difficult Terms", is the earliest known vocabulary of botanical terms.
Rembert Dodoens - Flemish (1517-1585) - Cruydeboeck (1554) was illustrated by 715 woodcuts of plants, including many copies from those in the Fuch's herbal. Dodoens' used Fuchs as his model for the description of each plant. The method of arrangement is his own. He indicates the localities and times of flowering in the Low Countries, information that could not have been derived from an earlier writer.
Original editions of the three herbals described above are available at the Texas A&M Cushing Library - see this overview or visit the library to have a look.
ARTIFICIAL CLASSIFICATIONS
Botanical research on the European flora during the Renaissance and subsequent global exploration produced an 'overload' of biological diversity that required a simple, efficient system of organization. This demand produced several purely 'artificial' systems of classification exemplified by Species plantarum (1753 - 23 volumes) of Carl Linnaeus.
Linnaeus
-
Sweden - (1707-1778) created a 'sexual' system that divided plants into
24
classes based in large part on the number, union, and length of
stamens. Secondary grouping with these classes (Order) was based
on the gynoecium mostly
the number of styles. While the artificial approach allowed quick
sorting
and identification, its application produced 'unnatural'
groupings.
The next step along the path of systematizing flowering plants involved
an
effort, which progressed through the 1700s and first half of the 19th
century,
to employ as many characters as needed to insure that natural
patterns
of variation were reflected by the classification system.
NATURAL CLASSIFICATIONS
George Bentham (1800-1884) and Sir Joseph Hooker (1817-1911) produced "Genera Plantarum" (1862-1883 - 3 volumes), collection of over 7,000 generic descriptions from 200 families taken from original observation of all major seed plants. This was the last great work produced on the assumption that angiosperm taxa are fixed entities, unchanging through time and placed on earth by the Creator. While the scientific rationale changed with Darwin, many taxonomic circumscriptions developed by Bentham and Hooker, remain valid today and many large herbaria remain structured according to the classification system expressed by Genera Plantarum.
PHYLOGENETIC CLASSIFICATIONS
Concepts of natural selection and lineage relationships present in Origin of Species, published in 1859 by Charles Darwin encouraged botanists to incorporate evolutionary concepts into classifications. The first move in this direction was expressed in a very complete, multi-volume work by german botanists Adolf Engler (1844-1930) and Karl Prantl (1849-1893) - "Die Naturlichen Pflanzenfamilien" (1887-1915) started with the most primitive plants and progressed to most structurally complex. The Englerian System positioned conifer-like (anemophilous; reduced, unisexual flowers) angiosperms at the phylogenetic base (especially the Casuarinaceae) with taxa producing large, showy flowers, such as many Magnoliidae, as derived or specialized. Thus, taxa now treated as the Hamamelidae (Engler's 'Amentiferae') represented the basal element and monocots are basal to dicots. While this notion has been abandoned by most involved with flowering plant classification, the Englerian System remains as a significant cataloging device in that, due to the size, scope, and quality of Die Naturlichen Pflanzenfamilien, most non-british herbaria of the world, at least the larger collections, are arranged according to the Englerian sequence.
Many recent systems of flowering plant classification are influenced by phylogenetic 'dicta' first published by American (University of Nebraska) Charles Bessey (1845-1915) which were outlined in our discussion of the Magnoliidae. A comparative overview of three such systems (Cronquist, Takhtajan, and Thorne) is available at the Flowering Plant Gateway. Fundamental alignments, by Order, are depicted by "Bessey's Cactus" (from your text, p. 473):
