
Luca Ghini.
'Luca Ghini' (
1490 -
May 4,
1556) was an
Italian physician and
botanist, notable as the creator of the first recorded
herbarium, as well as the first
botanical garden in Europe.
Ghini was born in
Imola, son of a
notary, and studied
medicine at the
University of Bologna. By 1527 he was lecturing there on medicinal plants, and eventually became a professor.
He moved to
Pisa in 1544, while maintaining his home in Bologna. He created the first herbarium (''hortus siccus'') in that year, drying plants while pressing them between pieces of paper, then gluing them to cardboard. 1544 also saw the establishment of a garden for live plants, which became known as the
Orto botanico di Pisa.
Ghini published no significant botanical work of his own, but was noted as a teacher many of whose students went on to significant careers, including
Cesalpino and
Mattioli, the latter of which he helped by travelling around the Mediterranean and Near East looking for plants that matched the mystifying descriptions of
Dioscorides. A ''Placiti'' describing Ghini's travels was published posthumously.
References
★ Duane Isely, ''One hundred and one botanists'' (Iowa State University Press, 1994), pp. 20-22
The standard botanical author abbreviation 'Ghini' is applied to plants described by this botanist, who should also appear on this list.