Betulaceae - Betula alba
From: Flora batava by Jan Kops, Herman Christiaan van Hall and others.
Amsterdam, J.C. Sepp, 1832, volume 6, plate 430. Hand-coloured engraving (unpressed sheet 237 x 295 mm). Text enclosed.€ 110
The Flora batava, a monumental work forming a beautifully illustrated survey of all indigenous
plants in the Netherlands. It was started in 1800 by Jan Kops, a Dutch
agronomist and professor of botany at Utrecht. The first 10 volumes constitute
all that was prepared and issued under his supervision (later assisted by Herman
Christiaan van Hall, Friedrich Anton Wilhelm Miquel and Johannes Everhardus van
der Trappen). When finished at last in 1934, Willem Jan Lütjeharms was the
editor for volume 28, in which he concludes that this work has ended now and
that publication took longer than any comparable foreign flora: De Flora Batava
heeft langer geleefd dan een der met dit werk vergelijkbare buitenlandsche
plaatwerken. The long publication period reflects the change in the technique
of its illustrations. Initially copper-engravings were used, followed by
lithographs, all coloured by hand, but from volume 25 colour-printing was
gradually introduced. Also several artists were involved, but the plates are not
signed, nor much information is given about them. The first publisher, J.C. Sepp
en Zoon, was renowned for its scientific colour-plate books. Each plate is
accompanied by a text in Dutch and French. The work was issued in 8vo and 4to.
This plate is in the most desirable large 4to format.
* Pritzel 4822; Jackson p. 324; Nissen BBI 2247; Great flower books p. 63; Landwehr 60; Stafleu &
Cowan 3874; Johnston 663; A hundred highlights from the koninklijke Bibliotheek 70.
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Betulaceae - Betula pumila
From: Dictionnaire des sciences naturelles. Planches … Botanique classée d’après la méthode naturelle
de M. Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu by Pierre Jean François Turpin.
Paris & Strasbourg, F.G. Levrault, 1816-1829, volume 5, plate 301. Hand-coloured
engraving after Turpin (sheet 120 x 213 mm).€ 90
Pierre Jean François Turpin (1775-1840) was possibly the greatest botanical genius of all the French
botanical painters of his day … In particular, his drawings of botanical details
have rarely been surpassed. ... (Blunt). With Pierre-Antoine Poiteau he
collaborated in some of the most important botanical publications of the early
years of the nineteenth century. In the finely illustrated botanical part of the
Dictionnaire … the plates by several engravers were issued uncoloured or coloured.
* Pritzel 10.722; Nissen BBI 2239; Blunt p. 180 ff.; Stafleu & Cowan 1293 & 15.384.
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