Flora Sinensis
Flora Sinensis is one of the first European natural history books about China, published in Vienna in 1656. Its author, Michael Boym, was a Jesuit missionary from Poland (then Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth).
This article may be confusing or unclear to readers. (July 2016) |
The book was the first description of an ecosystem of the Far East published in Europe. Boym underlined the medicinal properties of the Chinese plants. The book also included pleas for support of the Catholic Chinese emperor[who?] and each page contained a chronogram pointing to the date of 1655, the date of coronation of Emperor Leopold I as the King of Hungary, as Boym wanted to gain support of that monarch for his mission.
It is said that the Flora Sinensis was the first book that used the name "Flora" in this meaning, a book covering the plant world of a region. However, despite its title, the book covered not only plants, it obviously includes some species that are neither plants nor Chinese.
Drawing of, probably, the sugar-apple
References
External links
- Bibliothèque Universitaire Moretus Plantin (access to the facsimile of the book, its French translation, and an article about it)
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- Justapedia articles needing clarification from July 2016
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- Commons category link is the pagename
- Flora of China
- Florae (publication)
- Books about China
- 1656 books
- Botany in Asia
- Chinese encyclopedias
- 17th-century Latin books
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