Figures of the most beautiful, useful, and Uncommon plants described in The Gardeners dictionary, exhibited on Three Hundred Copper Plates, Accurately Engraven after drawings taken from nature. With The Characters of their Flowers and Seed-Vessels, Drawn when they were in their greatest Perfection. To which are added, Their Descriptions, and an Account of the Classes to which they belong, according to Ray's, Tournefort's, and Linnaeus's Method of Classing them. By Philip Miller, F. R. S. Member of the Botanic Academy at Florence, and Gardener to the Worshipful Company of Apothecaries at their Botanic Garden at Chelsea. In Two Volumes. ...
- Miller, Philip, 1691-1771.
- Date:
- M.DCC.LX. [1760]
- Books
- Online
Online resources
About this work
Publication/Creation
London : printed for the author; and sold by John Rivington in St. Paul's Church-Yard, A. Millar, H. Woodfall, J. Whiston and B. White, J. Hinton G. Hawkins, R. Baldwin, J. Richardson, W. Johnston, S. Crowder, P. Davey and B. Law, T. Caslon, and R. and J. Dodsley, M.DCC.LX. [1760]
Physical description
2v.(vi,200,[4]p.),plates ; 20.
Contributors
References note
ESTC T59417
Henrey, 1097
Reproduction note
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Thomson Gale, 2003. (Eighteenth century collections online). Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.