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BESLER, Basil (1561-1629)
Tulipa lutea miniate punctata [Early yellow tulip speckled crimson]; Tulipa alba unguibus luteis [Early white tulip with yellow center]; Tulipa alba maculis roseis [Early white tulip streakewd crimson]; Tulipa rosea, venis luteis [Yellow-veined pink tulip edged white]; Tulipa summe miniata calice luteo [Crimson gesnerana-type tulip with yellow base]
Eichstatt: 1713, 3rd edition. Hand-coloured engraving. In excellent condition. Backed on verso of sheet with fine archival backing sheet. Sheet size: 20 3/4 x 16 1/4 inches.
Basil Besler published "Hortus Eystettensis", the earliest large folio botanical, at Eichstatt near Nuremburg, in 1613. He worked on the drawings for the 374 copper engravings over a period of sixteen years using the plants in the garden of Bishop Johann Conrad von Gemmingen, his patron. Depicted in this florilegium were flowers, herbs, vegetables and newly discovered plants such as tobacco and peppers. Besler was, in modern terms, a botanist and horticulturalist, and he was familiar with real and alleged medicinal properties of various plants. Besler had the good fortune to live at a time when exotic plants were being shipped to Europe from all over the world. The garden that he organized and illustrated for his patron was both ornamental and experimental, and the large book he had engraved after his drawings was unique. The prints, made by a team of master engravers, are strong and exquisitely done.
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#16320 $7,500.00  |
© 2002-2005 Donald A. Heald
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