1
S outh Africa has a long history of being connected to Europe through the Dutch East India Company’s ‘half-way’ stop-over at Cape Town. A few hundred years ago it was fashionable for Europeans to collect plants and animals from Africa and beyond. The Cape with its unique flora attracted many private collectors. It is not, therefore, surprising that the many new plant genera were named after these early collectors and their benefactors – and that many of the type specimens are housed in herbaria in Kew, Stockholm, Berlin and Paris. The Cape and South Africa generally also provided Europe and the colonies with many new living plants that today have been hybridized and are widely cultivated: e.g. geraniums (really pelar- goniums) as window boxed plants in Switzerland, gladioli, and heaths; and clivias in abundance in Sydney! In this lecture, Professor Eugene Moll will elaborate on how as the editor of The Illustrated Dictionary of Southern Africa Plant Names he was able to honour some contemporary botanists and photographers at a time in taxono- my when the names of plants are be- devilled by upheavals and controversy. * As a partially self-funding entity, we are obliged to charge a small fee for extension lectures. These are fixed at Summer School rates. www.summerschool.uct.ac.za Monday 24 July 18.00–19.00 LT3 Kramer Building, Middle Campus, UCT R100 (full fee); R50(staff)* R30(students) RSVP 021 650 2888 or [email protected]. From Acacia to Zygophyllum: the story behind The Illustrated Diconary of Southern African Plant Names Professor Eugene Moll

From Acacia to Zygophyllum€¦ · through the Dutch East India Company’s ‘half-way’ stop-over at Cape Town. A few hundred years ago it was fashionable for Europeans to collect

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    0

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: From Acacia to Zygophyllum€¦ · through the Dutch East India Company’s ‘half-way’ stop-over at Cape Town. A few hundred years ago it was fashionable for Europeans to collect

S outh Africa has a long history of

being connected to Europe

through the Dutch East India

Company’s ‘half-way’ stop-over at

Cape Town. A few hundred years ago

it was fashionable for Europeans to

collect plants and animals from Africa

and beyond. The Cape with its unique

flora attracted many private collectors.

It is not, therefore, surprising that the

many new plant genera were named

after these early collectors and their

benefactors – and that many of the

type specimens are housed in herbaria

in Kew, Stockholm, Berlin and Paris.

The Cape and South Africa generally

also provided Europe and the colonies

with many new living plants that today

have been hybridized and are widely

cultivated: e.g. geraniums (really pelar-

goniums) as window boxed plants in

Switzerland, gladioli, and heaths; and

clivias in abundance in Sydney!

In this lecture, Professor Eugene Moll

will elaborate on how as the editor of

The Illustrated Dictionary of Southern

Africa Plant Names he was able to

honour some contemporary botanists

and photographers at a time in taxono-

my when the names of plants are be-

devilled by upheavals and controversy.

* As a partially self-funding entity, we are obliged to charge a small fee for extension lectures. These are fixed at Summer School rates.

www.summerschool.uct.ac.za

Monday 24 July 18.00–19.00

LT3 Kramer Building,

Middle Campus, UCT

R100 (full fee); R50(staff)* R30(students)

RSVP 021 650 2888 or [email protected].

From Acacia to Zygophyllum: the story

behind The Illustrated Dictionary of Southern African Plant Names

Professor Eugene Moll