The naming of names

by Anna Pavord

Paper Book, 2005

Call number

QK 96 .P38 2005

Publication

London : Bloomsbury, 2005.

Description

Traces the search for order in the natural world, a search that for hundreds of years occupied some of the most brilliant minds in Europe, reaching its apex during the Renaissance. From Athens in the third century BC, through Constantinople, Venice, the medical school at Salerno to the universities of Pisa and Padua, the journey involves a world full of intrigue and intensely competitive egos, from Europe to the culture of Islam, the first expeditions to the Indies and the first settlers in the New World. Gradually, over a long period, plants assumed identities and artists painted pictures of them. Plants acquired the two-part names that show how they are related to other plants. But who began all this work, and how was it done?--From publisher description.… (more)

Pages

480

Tags

ISBN

0747579520 / 9780747579526

Media reviews

A proper understanding of plants would have revolutionised medicine and the understanding of the world, but for thousands of years the subject was spurned. An eloquent champion for this esoteric subject, Pavord also knows that her narrative embraces far more than just plant names. Science's move
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towards a system of universal classification is representative of humanity's struggle to discern order in the universe.
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1 more
She's an excellent guide, sometimes a little bossy, a little longwinded, like most guides, but she knows her stuff, and loves it. And the scenery is marvellous: dozens and dozens of beautifully reproduced pages from manuscripts painted by Persian scholars or Anglo-Saxon monks, delicate
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fifth-century herbaries, glorious illustrations from 18th-century books - some naive, some exquisite, all seductive. Well printed, well bound, better proofread than most books these days, and full of lovely pictures, The Naming of Names is a superb object to display on the coffee table. Its clear and erudite text makes it a great deal more than that.
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