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Auction archive: Lot number 1127

HOFMEISTER, Wilhelm Friedrich Benedikt (1824-1877). Vergleichende Untersuchungen der Keimung, Entfaltung und Fruchtbildung hherer Kryptogamen (Moose, Farrn, Equisetaceen, Rhizocarpeen und Lycopodiaceen) und der Sammlung der Coniferen . Leipzig: Breit...

Auction 29.10.1998
29 Oct 1998
Estimate
US$3,000 - US$4,000
Price realised:
US$3,450
Auction archive: Lot number 1127

HOFMEISTER, Wilhelm Friedrich Benedikt (1824-1877). Vergleichende Untersuchungen der Keimung, Entfaltung und Fruchtbildung hherer Kryptogamen (Moose, Farrn, Equisetaceen, Rhizocarpeen und Lycopodiaceen) und der Sammlung der Coniferen . Leipzig: Breit...

Auction 29.10.1998
29 Oct 1998
Estimate
US$3,000 - US$4,000
Price realised:
US$3,450
Beschreibung:

HOFMEISTER, Wilhelm Friedrich Benedikt (1824-1877). Vergleichende Untersuchungen der Keimung, Entfaltung und Fruchtbildung hherer Kryptogamen (Moose, Farrn, Equisetaceen, Rhizocarpeen und Lycopodiaceen) und der Sammlung der Coniferen . Leipzig: Breitkopf und Hrtel for Friedrich Hofmeister, 1851. 4 o (266 x 216 mm). 33 numbered engraved plates, each with numerous figures illustrating plant structure. Modern half cloth; folding cloth case. Provenance : Herbert McLean Evans (1882-1971), anatomist and biologist, pioneer collector of books in the history of science (bookplate, initials). EXTREMELY RARE FIRST EDITION OF A CLASSIC IN THE HISTORY OF BOTANY. Son and heir of the Leipzig music publisher, Hofmeister was almost entirely self-educated in science and mathematics. Possibly because of his severe myopia, he was attracted to the study of botany early on and became an excellent microscopist. Like many of his generation, he was heavily influenced by Schleiden's textbook (see lot 1289), which introduced a new methodology to the study of plant morphology and urged researchers to focus on cell structure and the study of life history. Hofmeister's early work in this area earned him a highly unusual honorary doctorate of philosophy in 1851, shortly before publication of the present work, "for which he is now remembered" (DSB). In it Hofmeister presents without introduction the morphology and life cycles of several cryptogamic species (non-flowering plants such as mosses, ferns, lichens, etc.), in order of increasing complexity. Hofmeister "revealed the process of fertilization in non-flowering plants... as a regular alternation of sexual and asexual generations in the mosses, ferns, horsetails and liverworts. [He showed that] the asexual generation propagated by means of spores, alternating with one in which spermatozoids unite with ova" (Dibner). "The amount of new information presented is immense; the errors are minor and do not affect the overall picture... With this single publication, the core of botany passed from its Middle Ages to the modern period" (DSB). Hofmeister's researches led him to the "revolutionary conclusion that all green land plants undergo a regular alternation of dissimilar generations in their complete life histories" (Norman), a major step toward a unitary classification of plant life. The extension of Hofmeister's classification to the higher taxonomic groupings of conifers and flowering plants "could not fail to foster the growth of phylogenetic and evolutionary ideas" (Morton, History of botanical science , London 1981, p. 403). Hofmeister's work is presented without commentary and requires for comprehension a straight page-by-page reading. In 1852, the English botanist Arthur Henfrey published an expanded version, complete with commentary and other features that brought the work "from the level of the research worker down to that of the student" (DSB); this version appeared in the Tagsberichte ber die Forstschritte der Natur- und Heilkunde . A second edition, an English translation incorporating supplementary papers and revisions by the author, was published in 1862 (see lot 944). According to DSB, of approximately 100 extant copies of this first edition, only five have appeared on the market in the past several decades. Nissen BBI 902; Waller 11538; cf. Dibner Heralds 34 (1862 English edition); Norman 1083.

Auction archive: Lot number 1127
Auction:
Datum:
29 Oct 1998
Auction house:
Christie's
New York, Park Avenue
Beschreibung:

HOFMEISTER, Wilhelm Friedrich Benedikt (1824-1877). Vergleichende Untersuchungen der Keimung, Entfaltung und Fruchtbildung hherer Kryptogamen (Moose, Farrn, Equisetaceen, Rhizocarpeen und Lycopodiaceen) und der Sammlung der Coniferen . Leipzig: Breitkopf und Hrtel for Friedrich Hofmeister, 1851. 4 o (266 x 216 mm). 33 numbered engraved plates, each with numerous figures illustrating plant structure. Modern half cloth; folding cloth case. Provenance : Herbert McLean Evans (1882-1971), anatomist and biologist, pioneer collector of books in the history of science (bookplate, initials). EXTREMELY RARE FIRST EDITION OF A CLASSIC IN THE HISTORY OF BOTANY. Son and heir of the Leipzig music publisher, Hofmeister was almost entirely self-educated in science and mathematics. Possibly because of his severe myopia, he was attracted to the study of botany early on and became an excellent microscopist. Like many of his generation, he was heavily influenced by Schleiden's textbook (see lot 1289), which introduced a new methodology to the study of plant morphology and urged researchers to focus on cell structure and the study of life history. Hofmeister's early work in this area earned him a highly unusual honorary doctorate of philosophy in 1851, shortly before publication of the present work, "for which he is now remembered" (DSB). In it Hofmeister presents without introduction the morphology and life cycles of several cryptogamic species (non-flowering plants such as mosses, ferns, lichens, etc.), in order of increasing complexity. Hofmeister "revealed the process of fertilization in non-flowering plants... as a regular alternation of sexual and asexual generations in the mosses, ferns, horsetails and liverworts. [He showed that] the asexual generation propagated by means of spores, alternating with one in which spermatozoids unite with ova" (Dibner). "The amount of new information presented is immense; the errors are minor and do not affect the overall picture... With this single publication, the core of botany passed from its Middle Ages to the modern period" (DSB). Hofmeister's researches led him to the "revolutionary conclusion that all green land plants undergo a regular alternation of dissimilar generations in their complete life histories" (Norman), a major step toward a unitary classification of plant life. The extension of Hofmeister's classification to the higher taxonomic groupings of conifers and flowering plants "could not fail to foster the growth of phylogenetic and evolutionary ideas" (Morton, History of botanical science , London 1981, p. 403). Hofmeister's work is presented without commentary and requires for comprehension a straight page-by-page reading. In 1852, the English botanist Arthur Henfrey published an expanded version, complete with commentary and other features that brought the work "from the level of the research worker down to that of the student" (DSB); this version appeared in the Tagsberichte ber die Forstschritte der Natur- und Heilkunde . A second edition, an English translation incorporating supplementary papers and revisions by the author, was published in 1862 (see lot 944). According to DSB, of approximately 100 extant copies of this first edition, only five have appeared on the market in the past several decades. Nissen BBI 902; Waller 11538; cf. Dibner Heralds 34 (1862 English edition); Norman 1083.

Auction archive: Lot number 1127
Auction:
Datum:
29 Oct 1998
Auction house:
Christie's
New York, Park Avenue
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