WILLIAM ROXBURGH

Engraving by Charles Turner Warren

'William Roxburgh' (June 29, 1751April 10, 1815) was a Scottish physician and botanist. He has been called the ''Father of Indian Botany''.[1]

Contents
Early life
Career
Recognition, Death
Posthumous honours
References

Early life


Roxburgh was born at Underwood in the parish of Craigie, Ayrshire. He studied medicine in Edinburgh and became surgeon's mate on an East India Company ship at the age of 17 and completed two voyages to the East in that capacity until the age of 21. He also studied botany in Edinburgh under John Hope. He joined the Madras Medical Service as an assistant surgeon in 1776 and became a surgeon in 1780.Noltie, H.J. (1999) Indian botanical drawings 1793-1868. ISBN 1-872291-23-6

Career


Took up a position in Madras and turned his attention to botany. The East India Company recognized his botanical knowledge and made him superintendent in the Samalkot garden in the Northern Circars in 1781. Here he conducted economic botany experiments. He employed native artists to illustrate plants. He had 700 illustration by 1790. He succeeded Patrick Russell (1727-1805) as Naturalist to the Madras Government. Made rapid progress and acquired so such a reputation that he was in a short time invited by the government of Bengal, to take charge of the Calcutta Botanical gardens from Colonel Robert Kyd. He was succeeded by Francis Buchanan-Hamilton. He sent many of his illustration to Sir Joseph Banks. In 1793 he succeeded Colonel Robert Kyd as Superintendent of the Company garden at Sibpur near Calcutta. A catalog of the garden was made in 1814 - ''Hortus Bengalensis''.
He became a member of the Asiatic Society, to whose Transactions he contributed, from time to time, many valuable papers, and amongst these one of singular interest on the lacca insect, from which called lac was made.

Recognition, Death


In 1805, he received the gold medal of the Society for the Promotion of Arts, for a series of highly interesting and valuable communications on the subject of the productions of the East. In 1803 he received a second gold medal for a communication on the growth of trees in India, and on the 31st of May, 1814, was presented with a third, in the presence of a large assembly which he personally attended, by the duke of Norfolk, who was then president of the Society of Arts.
Soon after receiving this last honourable testimony of the high respect in which his talents were held, Mr Roxburgh returned to Edinburgh, where he died.

Posthumous honours


In 1820 at the Mission Press in Serampore, William Carey posthumously edited and published vol. 1 of Dr. William Roxburgh's ''Flora Indica; or Descriptions of Indian Plants''. In 1824, Carey edited and published vol. 2 of Roxburgh's ''Flora Indica'', including extensive remarks and contributions by Dr. Nathaniel Wallich. Carey and Wallich's continued to work in the field of botany and in 1834, both Carey and Wallich contributed botanical specimens to the Royal Society for Agriculture and Botany's Winter Show in Ghent, Belgium.

References


1. Bole, P. V. 1976. Review of Flora Indica or Descriptions of Indian Plants. by William Roxburgh, William CareyThe Quarterly Review of Biology, Vol. 51, No. 3:442-443


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