Search preferences
Skip to main search results

Search filters

Product Type

  • All Product Types 
  • Books (No further results match this refinement)
  • Magazines & Periodicals (No further results match this refinement)
  • Comics (No further results match this refinement)
  • Sheet Music (No further results match this refinement)
  • Art, Prints & Posters (1)
  • Photographs (No further results match this refinement)
  • Maps (No further results match this refinement)
  • Manuscripts & Paper Collectibles (No further results match this refinement)

Condition Learn more

  • New (No further results match this refinement)
  • As New, Fine or Near Fine (No further results match this refinement)
  • Very Good or Good (No further results match this refinement)
  • Fair or Poor (No further results match this refinement)
  • As Described (1)

Binding

  • All Bindings 
  • Hardcover (No further results match this refinement)
  • Softcover (No further results match this refinement)

Collectible Attributes

Language (1)

Price

  • Any Price 
  • Under £ 20 (No further results match this refinement)
  • £ 20 to £ 35 
  • Over £ 35 (No further results match this refinement)
Custom price range (£)

Free Shipping

  • Free Shipping to U.S.A. (No further results match this refinement)

Seller Location

Seller Rating

  • All Sellers 
  • 2-star rating and up (1)
  • 3-star rating and up (No further results match this refinement)
  • 4-star rating and up (No further results match this refinement)
  • 5-star rating (No further results match this refinement)
  • CURTIS, WILLIAM

    Seller: Antique Paper Company, ASHFORD, KENT, United Kingdom

    Seller rating 2 out of 5 stars 2-star rating, Learn more about seller ratings

    Contact seller

    Art / Print / Poster

    £ 6 shipping from United Kingdom to U.S.A.

    Destination, rates & speeds

    Quantity: 1 available

    Add to basket

    An original antique engraving published for CURTISS BOTANICAL MAGAZINE; OR FLOWER-GARDEN DISPLAYED in 1808. Original hand colour and comes with original text page. Size approx 14cm x 23cm including margins.William Curtis (11 January 1746 andndash; 7 July 1799) was an English botanist and entomologist who was born in Alton, Hampshire, site of the Curtis Museum. Curtis began as an apothecary, before turning his attention to botany and other natural history. The publications he prepared reached a wider audience than early works on the subject had intended. At the age of 25 he produced Instructions for collecting and preserving insects; particularly moths and butterflies. Curtis was demonstrator of plants and Praefectus Horti at the Chelsea Physic Garden from 1771 to 1777. He established his own London Botanic Garden at Lambeth in 1779, moving to Brompton in 1789. He published Flora Londinensis (6 volumes, 1777andndash;1798), a pioneering work in that it devoted itself to urban nature. Financial success was not found, but he went on the publish The Botanical Magazine in 1787, a work that would also feature hand coloured plates by artists such as James Sowerby and Sydenham Edwards. (William Kilburn is often erroneously cited as having contributed plates to Curtiss Botanical Magazine.Though he did provide illustrations to Flora Londinensis, his association with Curtis seems to have ended by 1777, 10 years before the first publication of the Botanical Magazine) . Curtis was to gain wealth from the ventures into publishing, short sales on Londinensis were offset by over 3,000 copies of the magazine. Curtis said they had each brought pudding or praise. The genus Curtisia is named in his honour. His publication was continued as the esteemed botanical publication, Curtiss Botanical Magazine. He was buried in the churchyard at St. Marys Church, Battersea where he is commemorated in a stained glass window, as many of his samples were collected from the churchyard there. His headstone, now lost, had the epitaph While living herbs shall spring profusely wild, or gardens cherish all thats blithe and gay, So long thy works shall please, dear Natures child, So long thy memry suffer no decay.