Accession No

5129


Brief Description

botanical wallchart showing capsule of Splachnum vasculosum, by John Stevens Henslow, English, 1827-1861


Origin

England; Cambridge


Maker

Henslow, John Stevens


Class

natural history; prints


Earliest Date

1827


Latest Date

1861


Inscription Date


Material

cloth; paper


Dimensions

breadth 961mm; height 662mm


Special Collection

Botanical teaching diagrams from Dept. of Plant Sciences


Provenance

Transferred from the Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, in 06/2008. On loan from the Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, from 01/1994.


Inscription

‘Splachnum Vasculosum’ (top left)


Description Notes

Botanical wallchart showing capsule of the moss species Splachnum vasculosum (Order: Funariales).
Two diagrams, both in colour.
Inscription is stencilled at top left. Ink inscription at bottom left reads “Splachnum vasculosum. Grev. Crypt. 3 .t.179” (Possibly a reference to volume 3 of Robert Kaye Greville’s 6 volume Flora Edinensis; or, a description of plants growing near Edinburgh, arranged according to the Linnaean system: with a concise introduction to the natural orders of the class Cryptogamia, and illustrative plates.)
Reference numbers at top and bottom left corners (relative to orientation of inscription). (Previous PS ref. was O48)


References


Events

Description
Botanical teaching diagram showing capsule of Splachnum vasculosum.

John Stevens Henslow (1796-1861) and his son George (1835-1925) were both British botanists, and were educated at the University of Cambridge. Though he modestly claimed to know "very little" about botany, John Henslow transformed the subject at the University of Cambridge and redesigned the old botanical garden, which opened to the public in 1846. With his son, the Henslows illustrated over 100 colourful botanical wall charts for teaching and studying. These valuable collections are now at the Whipple Museum.
03/04/2023
Created by: Guey-Mei Hsu on 03/04/2023


FM:44021

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