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1536 First canna illustration
January 9, 1536
The plate in Leonhart Fuchs’s unpublished book ‘The Vienna Codex’ (compiled between 1536 and 1566) representing Canna indica may well be the first illustration of the genus in botanical literature. The plate is annotated as ‘Gladiolus indicus or Indischer Schwertel’, and numbered ‘Cod. 11122, p. 321’. This plate has been…
Read more1576 De Lobel & Indica florida
January 9, 1576
In 1576 De Lobel described and illustrated a plant cultivated in Belgium as ‘Indica florida’, the seeds of which he had received from friends from the West Indies (‘Indiae Occiduae’). According to him the species was very rare, but already in cultivation in France, England, Italy, and Portugal. He did…
Read more1601 Clusius and Canna indica
January 9, 1601
Clusius writes in his famous herbal of 1601 that a plant named ‘Canna indica or Flos Cancri’ (because the closed flowers resemble the claw of a lobster) had already been cultivated for a long time in cloister gardens in Portugal where it may well have arrived with the early discoverers…
Read more1648 Willem Piso book
January 9, 1648
In 1648 a book on medicinal plants of Brazil was published by Willem Piso, physician of the Dutch settlement in Recife (Brazil), then Dutch property and governed by Johan Maurits van Nassau. He provided the first description and illustration of both the wild Canna indica (as ‘Meeru, sive Canna Indica’)…
Read more1671 Bauhin book
January 9, 1671
In 1671 Bauhin published the second editions of both his ‘Prodromus Theatri Botanici’ and ‘Pinax’. In these books Canna is still placed in one group with Arundo inodora (Phragmites), Arundo odorata (Calamus), and Arundo indica (comprising bamboo, sugar cane, and Canna).
Read more1678 Van Rheede & ‘Hortus Indicus Malabaricus’
January 9, 1678
Between 1678 and 1693 Van Rheede tot Draakestein published ‘Hortus Indicus Malabaricus’, a book on the medicinal plants of a Dutch colony in SE India. As was customary in this period, people were much interested in local medicines to help keeping the inhabitants of the new colony healthy, and especially…
Read more1685 Canna seeds in Indonesia
January 9, 1685
Rumphius treating Canna in the fifth volume of his Herbarium Amboinense (1747: 177) recalls encountering rosaries made of the seeds of Canna found in the possession of an Arabian (?) prisoner taken into custody at Ambon (Indonesia) in 1685.
Read more1700 De Tournefort first details of canna flower
January 9, 1700
In 1700 De Tournefort gives the first detailed illustration of the floral parts of a flower and fruit of Canna (as Cannacorus or ‘Balisier’), mentioning 6 species. He illustrates 3 sepals and 1 petal which is divided into 6 lobes: 1 of these lobes bears both anther and stigma.
Read more1732 Dillenius lists canna in ‘Hortus Elthamensis’
January 9, 1732
In 1732 Dillenius made a list of the plants cultivated in ‘Hortus Elthamensis’, the garden of J. Sherard in Eltham (now in Southeast London) in England, in which he described and illustrated Canna flaccida, originating from South Carolina, USA. He did not realize his ‘Cannacorus glaucophyllos, ampliore flore, iridis palustris…
Read more1737 Linnaeus published ‘Hortus Cliffortianus’
January 9, 1737
In 1737 Linnaeus published ‘Hortus Cliffortianus’, a list of the plants cultivated in the garden of G. Clifford in the Netherlands, and ‘Viridiarum Cliffortianum’, an abbreviated version of the former book. He noticed 2 ‘kinds’ of plants from this garden: 1. Canna spathulis bifloris (= Canna indica) originating from the…
Read more1753 Official taxonomy of Cannaceae starts
January 9, 1753
Following the international rules of botanical nomenclature, the official taxonomy of Cannaceae starts in 1753 when Linnaeus published ‘Species Plantarum’. In this book Linnaeus arranged the plants according to his new binominal system.
Read more1754 Millers Gardeners Dictionary 4th Ed.
January 10, 1754
One year later, in 1754, Miller still uses the generic name Cannacorus in the abbreviated 4th edition of his Gardeners Dictionary. The genus comprises 6 species, described by more than 2 Latin words, the first being ‘C. latifolius vulgaris. Tourn.’ (= Canna indica). In the 8th edition of ‘The Gardeners…
Read more1791 Bartram describes C. flaccida
January 10, 1791
The third species of Canna, C. flaccida, has been described and illustrated by Salisbury in 1791 from a plant originally collected by J. Bartram in South Carolina, USA, and at the time generally cultivated in gardens in England (cf. typification of C. glauca).
Read more1798 Ruiz & Pavón list C. paniculata and C. iridiflora
January 10, 1798
In their ‘Flora Peruviana’ of 1798 Ruiz & Pavón listed 3 species of Canna. Apart from C. indica they described 2 new species: C. paniculata and C. iridiflora, both based on Peruvian material.
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