Nicholas Gwyn, Ipswich, [Suffolk], to James Edward Smith, chez Marquis Ippolito Durazzo, Genoa, [Italy]

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Ref No GB-110/JES/COR/5/23
Title Nicholas Gwyn, Ipswich, [Suffolk], to James Edward Smith, chez Marquis Ippolito Durazzo, Genoa, [Italy]
Letter date 30 Oct 1786
Author(s) Nicholas Gwyn 1710-1798
Number of Pages 4

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GB-110/JES/COR/5/23 from Nicholas Gwyn, Ipswich, [Suffolk], to James Edward Smith, chez Marquis Ippolito Durazzo, Genoa, [Italy] (30 October 1786)

Metadata for GB-110/JES/COR/5/23 from Nicholas Gwyn, Ipswich, [Suffolk], to James Edward Smith, chez Marquis Ippolito Durazzo, Genoa, [Italy] (30 October 1786) Close

Item data

Item Type: Document
From: Gwyn, Nicholas
Sent from: Ipswich, Suffolk
To: Smith, Sir James Edward
Sent to location: Genoa, Italy
Summary:

Requests specific works of [Louis Éconches] Feuillée [(1660-1732) French botanist] and foreign plants and seeds not found in Britain, makes specific requests from Pisa [contracted and abbreviated to illegibility]. Asks if 'Thea' trees are plentiful in Genoa. List of desiderata at end of letter. Specifically asks for seeds of 'Stellaria [dichotoma]' from Switzerland and Siberia to convince him of his error in thinking it can be British as well as Swiss considering that 'Fritillaria meleagris' and 'Epilobium [alpinum]' grow wild in England. Thanks for books, happy that Gaubius escaped flames. Advises Smith to thoroughly edit and correct his thesis before publishing it and admonishes him for blindly accepting all of Linnaeus' tenets from his writings alone, complains this is all that is needed for a first degree from Oxford or Cambridge. Pleased Smith can access the collections of [Joseph de] Jussieu, [Sébastien] Vaillant and others. General wish for an enlarged edition of the "Systema Vegetibilum". Clarification of statement on 'Coffea occidentalis'.
Asks Smith to consult Cupani's "Hortus Catholicus" and the "Supplemen alterum" in Naples; lists plants and other authors [heavily abbreviated and contracted]. Smith's 'Sisymbrium tenuifolium' "continues as a 'Brassica'", asks if it is the Betel of the Medes and Persians. Relates that [William] Curtis is learning botany at [Norwich] under "R. P." and others, believes the value of the "Flora Londinensis" will rise. A pupil of [Richard] Relhan's states that most British plants are to be found in Cambridgeshire so we may expect a "Flora Cantabrigiensis" soon. Has seen the "aurelian" Clara Reeve's [(1729-1807) novelist and poet] collection of shells, and has sent her Linnaeus' "Venus". Two of the plants in the desiderata are for Reeve.

Letter date: 30 Oct 1786
Languages: English
Prev Ref No: 5.46
Additional Information:
Note typeNote
AdditionalSmith replied 14 Jan 1787
Finding AidsDawson, W R, (1934). "Catalogue of the manuscripts in the Library of The Linnean Society - Part I. The Smith papers: The correspondence and miscellaneous papers of Sir James Edward Smith", London: Linnean Society.
Related MaterialCupani, F (1696). "Hortus catholicus ..." Neapoli: Franciscum Benzi [bound with: - "Supplemen alterum ad hortum catholicum ..." pp.[viii], 95, [3]. Panormi, Joseph Gramignani (1697)]. Curtis, W (1777-1798). "Flora Londinensis: or plates and descriptions of such plants as grow wild in the environs of London..." London: [privately]. Rehlan, R (1785-1793). "Flora Cantabrigiensis, exhibens plantas agro Cantabrigiensi indigenas, secundum systema sexuale digestas... - Supplementum & Supplementum alterum & Supplementum tertium.)" Cantabrigia: J. Archdeacon. Linnaeus, C, Roemer, E, and Gmelin, J F (1857). "Kritische Untersuchung der Arten des Molluskengeschlechts Venus bei Linne und Gmelin mit Berucksichtigung der spater beschriebenen Arten." Cassel: Luckhardt.