|Listed in category:
This listing sold on Fri, 11 Jul at 7:01 PM.
FATHERS OF BOTANY: THE DISCOVERY OF CHINESE PLANTS BY By Jane Kilpatrick
Sold
FATHERS OF BOTANY: THE DISCOVERY OF CHINESE PLANTS BY By Jane Kilpatrick
US $44.45US $44.45
Jul 11, 19:01Jul 11, 19:01
Have one to sell?

FATHERS OF BOTANY: THE DISCOVERY OF CHINESE PLANTS BY By Jane Kilpatrick

US $44.45
ApproximatelyRM 186.97
Condition:
Very Good
    Shipping:
    US $6.72 (approx RM 28.27) USPS Media MailTM.
    Located in: East Aurora, New York, United States
    Delivery:
    Estimated between Sat, 16 Aug and Thu, 21 Aug to 94104
    Delivery time is estimated using our proprietary method which is based on the buyer's proximity to the item location, the shipping service selected, the seller's shipping history, and other factors. Delivery times may vary, especially during peak periods.
    Returns:
    No returns accepted.
    Coverage:
    Read item description or contact seller for details. See all detailsSee all details on coverage
    (Not eligible for eBay purchase protection programmes)
    Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing.
    eBay item number:134416967969
    Last updated on Jul 08, 2025 10:47:01 MYTView all revisionsView all revisions

    Item specifics

    Condition
    Very Good: A book that has been read but is in excellent condition. No obvious damage to the cover, ...
    Book Title
    Fathers of Botany: The Discovery of Chinese Plants by European
    ISBN-10
    022620670X
    Genre
    Science
    ISBN
    9780226206707

    About this product

    Product Identifiers

    Publisher
    University of Chicago Press
    ISBN-10
    022620670X
    ISBN-13
    9780226206707
    eBay Product ID (ePID)
    12038266210

    Product Key Features

    Number of Pages
    224 Pages
    Language
    English
    Publication Name
    Fathers of Botany: the Discovery of Chinese Plants by European Missionaries
    Subject
    Life Sciences / Botany, Plants / General, Cultural Heritage, Environmentalists & Naturalists
    Publication Year
    2015
    Type
    Textbook
    Subject Area
    Nature, Science, Biography & Autobiography
    Author
    Jane Kilpatrick
    Format
    Hardcover

    Dimensions

    Item Height
    1 in
    Item Weight
    60.1 Oz
    Item Length
    11.8 in
    Item Width
    9.9 in

    Additional Product Features

    Intended Audience
    Scholarly & Professional
    LCCN
    2014-013979
    Dewey Edition
    23
    Reviews
    This beautifully produced and illustrated book is heartily recommended to anyone interested in the history of plant discovery or that of the Missions Etrangères and its brave men., Presents an age that has been nearly forgotten. The author explores this history through published articles and reports, personal letters, rare and old travel journals, botanical magazines, and government and/or official documents. . . . A useful reference for . . . students in botany, plant sciences, forestry, horticulture, and economic botany., Kilpatrick has . . . explained these committed Christians' achievements with admirable clarity and freshness. Their individual stories are not new, but she draws them very ably into a related whole. Historians and gardeners can all gain from her unmissable book Fathers of Botany . . . . With only a few converts and to many of us, a hopeless aim, it would be easy to write wryly of these French priests' hopes of spreading the Gospel. Excellently, Kilpatrick shows the Christian church built in Cigu in 1867, on the Tibetan borderlands, where once the fathers had struggled to give the Eucharist to only a few converts. Now there are more than 10 million Catholics in China and the faith is growing far faster than in old Europe. One day a Pope will be Chinese, but I doubt if he will bring unknown rhododendrons to the Vatican. On many of the hillsides near towns in western China they have been felled as firewood, making way for farming, not for gardening of the future., Exciting. As an account of the lives and dedication of these (mostly) French missionaries and plant discoverers, Fathers of Botany will be of wide interest. A fascinating account of some very frightful situations., This beautifully produced and illustrated book is heartily recommended to anyone interested in the history of plant discovery or that of the Missions Etrangres and its brave men., The subjects of Kilpatrick's book are major contributors to the Western world's knowledge of the striking and valuable flora of China. She is an experienced historian and garden writer with the skill to make historical information very lively reading. . . . While many of their discoveries are now relatively common staples in ornamental horticulture, the stories of the missionaries' struggles and experiences have not been told until now. The author successfully illuminates their contributions and thereby raises them from their undeserved obscurity. Their many adventures, some involving serious dangers, are engagingly described and accompanied by beautiful and thoughtfully chosen maps and black-and-white and color photographs. This book serves a very valuable function in documenting the history of China's botanical contribution to the world's horticultural treasury. . . . Recommended.
    Illustrated
    Yes
    Dewey Decimal
    580.92
    Synopsis
    The first to come upon the bounty of Chinese flowers were Catholic missionary priests who were also remarkable botanists. They spent hours collecting in their districts, and sending dry specimens back to European botanists. Many of the plants they discovered carry their names, but few know of the David behind Davidia involucrata, or the Hugonis of Rosa hugonis. The chapters in this work focus primarily on the lives of four great French missionary botanists--Pere Armand David, Pere Jean Marie Delavay, Pere Guilaume Farges, and Pere Jean Andre Soulie--and also a group of other French priests and Franciscan missionaries who collected, in addition to one German pastor, the only Protestant missionary to make significant plant collections. Pere David is among the best known, having discovered the Giant Panda, but the others have disappeared into the thick of history. This book will help ensure that today's gardeners and botanists appreciate the debt owed to this obscure group, drawing on their journals, drawings, and other historical documents., Many of the world's most renowned and exciting ornamental plants--including magnolias, roses, rhododendrons, tree peonies, lilies, and blue poppies--have their origins in China. In the mid-nineteenth century, professional plant hunters were dispatched by nurseries and botanic gardens to collect living botanical specimens from China for cultivation in Europe, and it is these adventurers and nurserymen who are often credited with the explosive bloom of Chinese flowers in the West. But as Jane Kilpatrick shows in Fathers of Botany , the first Westerners to come upon and document this bounty were in fact cut from a different cloth: the clergy. Following the Opium Wars, European missionaries were the first explorers to dig further into the Chinese interior and send home evidence of one of the richest and most varied floras ever seen, and it was their discoveries that caused a sensation among Western plantsmen. Both men of faith and talented botanists alike, these missionaries lent their names to many of the plants they discovered, but their own stories disappeared into the leaf litter of history. Drawing on their letters and contemporary accounts, Kilpatrick focuses on the lives of four great French missionary botanists--P res Armand David (of Davidia involucrata --the dove tree--and discoverer of the giant panda), Jean Marie Delavay, Paul Guillaume Farges, and Jean Andr Souli --as well as a group of other French priests, Franciscan missionaries, and a single German Protestant pastor who all amassed significant plant collections, as she unearths a lost chapter of botanical history. In so doing, she reminds today's gardeners and botanists--and any of us who stop to smell the roses--of the enormous debt owed to these obscure fathers of botany., Many of the world's most renowned and exciting ornamental plants--including magnolias, roses, rhododendrons, tree peonies, lilies, and blue poppies--have their origins in China. In the mid-nineteenth century, professional plant hunters were dispatched by nurseries and botanic gardens to collect living botanical specimens from China for cultivation in Europe, and it is these adventurers and nurserymen who are often credited with the explosive bloom of Chinese flowers in the West. But as Jane Kilpatrick shows in Fathers of Botany , the first Westerners to come upon and document this bounty were in fact cut from a different cloth: the clergy. Following the Opium Wars, European missionaries were the first explorers to dig further into the Chinese interior and send home evidence of one of the richest and most varied floras ever seen, and it was their discoveries that caused a sensation among Western plantsmen. Both men of faith and talented botanists alike, these missionaries lent their names to many of the plants they discovered, but their own stories disappeared into the leaf litter of history. Drawing on their letters and contemporary accounts, Kilpatrick focuses on the lives of four great French missionary botanists--Pères Armand David (of Davidia involucrata --the dove tree--and discoverer of the giant panda), Jean Marie Delavay, Paul Guillaume Farges, and Jean André Soulié--as well as a group of other French priests, Franciscan missionaries, and a single German Protestant pastor who all amassed significant plant collections, as she unearths a lost chapter of botanical history. In so doing, she reminds today's gardeners and botanists--and any of us who stop to smell the roses--of the enormous debt owed to these obscure fathers of botany.
    LC Classification Number
    QK26.K55 2014

    Item description from the seller

    About this seller

    jimaro

    100% positive feedback863 items sold

    Joined Apr 2004

    Detailed Seller Ratings

    Average for the last 12 months
    Accurate description
    5.0
    Reasonable shipping cost
    5.0
    Shipping speed
    5.0
    Communication
    5.0

    Seller feedback (290)

    All ratings
    Positive
    Neutral
    Negative
      • k***k (199)- Feedback left by buyer.
        Past month
        Verified purchase
        Shipped fast. Thanks
      See all feedback