Who were they named after?

Discussion in 'Gardening Discussions' started by LouisFerdinand, Dec 25, 2024 at 4:52 PM.

  1. LouisFerdinand

    LouisFerdinand Gardener

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    Magnolias were named after Pierre Magnol.
     
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    • NigelJ

      NigelJ Total Gardener

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      Buddleja davidii, after two priests Rev Buddle and Pere David.
      Bougainvillea after Admiral Bougainville.
       
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      • CarolineL

        CarolineL Total Gardener

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        But why did they change the spelling of buddleja?
         
      • NigelJ

        NigelJ Total Gardener

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        I really don't no, though a lot of people use buddleia.
         
      • NigelJ

        NigelJ Total Gardener

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        Lilium henryi after Ernest Henry Wilson also Clematis henryi and Lonicera henryi.
        Lilium davidi after Pere David.
        Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) after David Douglas and Archibald Menzies.
        Lilium mackliniea after the partner of Frank Kingdom Ward.
         
      • NigelJ

        NigelJ Total Gardener

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        Note a lot of plants are named after dead white people, generally male.
         
      • Pete8

        Pete8 Gardener

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        The forsythia plant is named after William Forsyth, the great-great-grandfather of entertainer Bruce Forsyth
         
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        • NigelJ

          NigelJ Total Gardener

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          Viburnum forrestii after George Forrest. He also has an Abies, a Pieris, a Hedychium, a Sorbus, an Acer and a Buddleja plus quite a few others.
          By the way @LouisFerdinand do you grow any of these?
           
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          • Plantminded

            Plantminded Head Gardener

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            Berberis darwinii, discovered during his journey on the Beagle in 1835.
             
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              Last edited: Dec 25, 2024 at 7:46 PM
            • shiney

              shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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              I know it's not the reason but the author Robert A Heinlein wrote a science fiction book "The Number Of The Beast" where one of the alternate universes they went to had only one difference to that of our universe and that was they didn't have the letter 'J' in their alphabet. :heehee:
               
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              • NigelJ

                NigelJ Total Gardener

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                The Romans didn't have J either so Julius Caesar would have been Iulius Caesar.
                 
              • katecat58

                katecat58 Gardener

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                I read a very good book about plant hunters this year. Can't remember what it was called now, but most of them were white male and had plants named after them.
                An exception- Miss Willmott's Ghost.
                 
              • NigelJ

                NigelJ Total Gardener

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                Genus Fuchsia named after botanist Leonhart Fuchs.
                Fuchsia hatschbachii after Gert Hatschbach.
                Lophora williamsii
                Leuchtenbergia principis after Maximillian Eugen Joseph Duke of Leuchtenberg.
                Strelitzia reginae after Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz Queen of George III of Great Britain and England.
                 
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                • CarolineL

                  CarolineL Total Gardener

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                  Ah but Miss Will Mott's Ghost was apparently named because she used to scatter seed of the eryngium in gardens she visited - leaving a ghost ie new plants
                   
                • kindredspirit

                  kindredspirit Gardening around a big Puddle. :)

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                  Drimys winterii named after Captain Wynters, second in command on Drake's voyage around the world, who discovered that its leaves/bark cured scurvy on board his ship.

                  From Wikipedia: When Sir Francis Drake sailed round the world in 1577-80, of the four ships accompanying the Golden Hind at the outset, the only ship that successfully reached the entrance to the Strait of Magellan was the Elizabeth, captained by John Wynter. Before entering the Strait, in July 1578, Drake sent Wynter ashore where he learned indigenous people ate the astringent bark.[8] The Elizabeth transversed the Strait. A week later the two ships were separated in a storm and Wynter turned back. Wynter returned in 1580[9] with a supply of Drimys bark, and for centuries before vitamin C was isolated, "Winter's Bark" was esteemed as a preventive and remedy for scurvy— correctly so, for an infusion of D. winteri sustained Captain James Cook and his crew in the South Pacific, and the naturalist accompanying his voyage of exploration, Johann Reinhold Forster, was the first to officially describe and name D. winteri.[10]
                   
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                    Last edited: Dec 27, 2024 at 9:50 AM
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