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Alphonse Pyramus de Candolle

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Nationality
  
France Switzerland

Fields
  
botany

Name
  
Alphonse de


Role
  
Botanist

Influences
  
A. P. de Candolle

Education
  
University of Geneva

Alphonse Pyramus de Candolle httpswwwnceasucsbedualroylefadeCandollejpg

Born
  
28 October 1806 Paris, France (
1806-10-28
)

Influenced
  
Anne Casimir Pyrame de Candolle, Nikolai Vavilov

Died
  
April 4, 1893, Geneva, Switzerland

Parents
  
Augustin Pyramus de Candolle

Children
  
Anne Casimir Pyrame de Candolle

Books
  
Origin of cultivated plants

Similar People
  
Augustin Pyramus de Cando, Jean‑Baptiste Alphonse Karr, Jean Ignace Isidore G, Nikolai Vavilov

Institutions
  
University of Geneva

Notable awards
  
Linnean Medal (1889)

Alphonse Louis Pierre Pyrame de Candolle (28 October 1806 – 4 April 1893) was a French-Swiss botanist, the son of the Swiss botanist Augustin Pyramus de Candolle.

Contents

Biography

De Candolle first devoted himself to the study of law, but gradually drifted to botany and finally succeeded to his father's chair at the University of Geneva. He published a number of botanical works, including continuations of the Prodromus in collaboration with his son, Anne Casimir Pyrame de Candolle. Among his other contributions is the formulation, based on his father's work for the Prodromus, of the first Laws of Botanical Nomenclature, which was adopted by the International Botanical Congress in 1867, and was the prototype of the current ICN.

He was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1859 and was awarded the Linnean Medal of the Linnean Society of London in 1889. He was elected a foreign member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1878. He is also known for a study of the religious affiliations of foreign members of the French and British Academies of Science during the Scientific Revolution that demonstrated that in both academies Protestants were more heavily represented than Catholics by comparison with catchment populations. This observation continues to be used (for example in David Landes' 1999 _Wealth and Poverty of Nations, cf. revised paperback edition, 177) as a demonstration that Protestants were more inclined to be scientifically active during the Scientific Revolution than Roman Catholics.

In 1855 de Candolle published Géographie botanique raisonnée This was a ground-breaking book that for the first time brought together the large mass of data being collected by the expeditions of the time. The natural sciences had become highly specialized yet this book synthesized them to explain living organisms within their environment and why plants were distributed the way they were, all upon a geologic scale. This book had a significant impact upon Harvard botanist Asa Gray.

Works

  • de Candolle, Alphonse (1855). Géographie botanique raisonnée. Paris: V. Masson. 
  • Candolle, Alphonse de - Lois de la nomenclature botanique adoptées par le Congrès international de botanique tenu à Paris en août 1867... Genève et Bale: H. Georg; Paris: J.-B. Baillière et fils, 1867. 64 p.
  • Candolle, Alphonse de (Membre Corr. de l'Acad. Sciences, Paris; Foreign Member, Royal Soc, etc.) - Histoire des Sciences et des Savants depuis deux Siècles. Geneva, 1873.
  • de Candolle, Alphonse (1885) [1882]. Origin of Cultivated Plants. New York: Appleton. Retrieved 19 February 2015.  (First edition in French)
  • References

    Alphonse Pyramus de Candolle Wikipedia


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