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Carl Friedrich Schmidt (1811)

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Nationality
  
German

Name
  
Carl Schmidt


Carl Friedrich Schmidt (1811)

Died
  
1890 Berlin, German Empire

Fields
  
Botany, Botanical artist, Lithographer

Institutions
  
University of Berlin

Carl Friedrich (C.F.) Schmidt (1811, Stettin  – 1890, Berlin) was a German botanist. He was a specialist in spermatophytes and a renowned artist and lithographer. He was also a prolific botanical artist (akademischer Künstler zu Berlin) who illustrated many of the Germanic botanical works of the 19th century. The standard author abbreviation C.F.Schmidt is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.

Contents

Carl Friedrich Schmidt (1811) Carl Friedrich Schmidt 1832 Wikipedia

Biography

Carl Friedrich Schmidt (1811) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonscc

In collaboration with Otto Karl Berg (1815-1866), professor of pharmaceutical botany at Berlin University, Schmidt was published in Darstellung und Beschreibung in den Pharmacopoea Sämtliche Borussica offizinellen Gewächse aufgeführten (1853). Publisher: Arthur Felix, Leipzig Schmidt both drew and lithographed the plates. Benjamin Daydon Jackson describes this work, a survey of plants used in the Prussian pharmacopoeia, as "A thoroughly good book, probably the very best of its class; both in text and illustrations".

Berg and Schmidt also published the Pharmacopoea Borussica aufgeführten offizinellen Gewächse in 1846.

C.F. Schmidt was a contributing artist to the work Köhler's Medizinal Pflanzen. Publisher: Gera-Untermhaus : F.E. Köhler, [1883-1914]. Medizinal Pflanzen was published in 1887 in Gera, an east-central German city south of Leipzig. The set of four volumes was a noteworthy achievement and included plants of medicinal interest from several European nations. It was described by Sitwell and Blunt as "From the botanical standpoint the finest and most useful series of illustrations of medicinal plants." Köhler's Medizinal Pflanzen was edited by Gustav Pabst, a German botanist. The remarkable feature of the publication is its nearly 300 finely detailed illustrations, expertly drawn by the artists L. Müeller and C.F. Schmidt, which were skillfully rendered by K. Gunther in chromolithography. Chromolithography is the process of rendering images on stone or zinc plates, then inking them with color inks to yield color pictures.

It is remotely possible that C.F. Schmidt was the proprietor of the C.F. Schmidt Photography Studio in Halberstadt, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany, in the mid 19th century. C.F. Schmidt, the botanical artist/lithographer, lived in Blankenburg am Harz, the village of his son's birth, in 1833. The C.F. Schmidt Photography Studio in Halberstadt is 10 miles from Blankenburg. More research needs to be performed in this area to establish any connection.

Family

Born in Stettin, Kingdom of Prussia, C.F. Schmidt would likely have been an acquaintance, perhaps even a close childhood friend, of Otto Karl Berg, who was also born in Stettin. It is with Berg, as adults, that Schmidt collaborated on several important scientific publications. Schmidt was four years older than Berg. In 1832 C.F. Schmidt married Christiane Johanne Kast. They had at least one son, Johann Christian Julius Schmidt, born in 1833 in Blankenburg am Harz, Germany.

References

Carl Friedrich Schmidt (1811) Wikipedia