Alexander Russell. Line engraving by T. Trotter after Sir N. Dance-Holland.

  • Dance, Nathaniel, Sir, 1735-1811.
Reference:
8300i
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Description

Below the portrait, a scammony plant. "Pitcairn and others raised plants from the Russells' seeds of the elegant shrub true scammony (Convolvulus scammonia). Alexander Russell … had raised it in pots in Aleppo from seeds collected in the mountains between Aleppo and Alexandretta (now Iskenderun). In an article Alexander described its medicinal properties as a purgative (Russell 1758 [1757?]: 13-25). This included a description of scammonium, the dried juice or gum-resin of scammony and local methods of extracting the milky juice which has been used in domestic medicine from ancient times."-- Ines Asceric-Todd et al. loc. cit.

Physical description

1 print : engraving

References note

Alexander Russell, 'A letter from Dr Alexander Russel to Dr John Fothergill, in White-Hart Court, Grace-Church-Street, describing the scammony plant'. Medical observations and inquiries, 1758, 1: 13-25
R. Burgess, Portraits of doctors & scientists in the Wellcome Institute, London 1973, no. 2568.1
Ines Asceric-Todd, Sabina Knees, Janet Starkey, Paul Starkey (edd.), Travellers in Ottoman lands: the botanical legacy, Oxford 2018, p. 132

Reference

Wellcome Collection 8300i

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