James Petiver

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Petiver (1663-1718) was a London apothecary, a Fellow of the Royal Society as well as London's informal Temple Coffee House Botany Club, famous for his study of botany and entomology. He named the Red Admiral butterfly after a British Naval Flag and named Fritillary after a chequered dice box.

Petiver received many plant specimens, seeds and much other material from correspondents in the American colonies.

[edit] Works

  • 1698 An account of some Indian plants etc. with their names, descriptions and vertues; communicated in a letter from Mr. James Petiver...to Mr. Samuel Brown, surgeon at Fort St. George, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London.
  • 1700-1703 - An account of part of a collection of curious plants and drugs, lately given to the Royal Society of the East India Company, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society

[edit] External links

  • [1]--Digitised versions of Aquatilium Animalium Amboinæ, etc.;Gazophylacium naturae et artisand Pteri-Graphia Americana at GDZ Göttingen.

[edit] Collections

British Natural History Museum

Languages