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Eduard August von Regel

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Name
  
Eduard von


Education
  
University of Bonn

Eduard August von Regel httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
August 13, 1815 (
1815-08-13
)
Gotha, Germany

Occupation
  
Botanist, Director of the Russian Imperial Botanical Garden of St. Petersburg.

Died
  
April 15, 1892, Saint Petersburg, Russia

Eduard August von Regel (sometimes Edward von Regel or Edward de Regel or Édouard von Regel), Russian: Эдуард Август Фон Регель; (born August 13, 1815 in Gotha, died April 15, 1892 in St. Petersburg) was a German horticulturalist and botanist. He ended his career serving as the Director of the Russian Imperial Botanical Garden of St. Petersburg. As a result of naturalists and explorers sending back biological collections, Regel was able to describe and name many previously unknown species from frontiers around the world.

Contents

History

Regel was the son of the teacher and garrison-preacher Ludwig A. Regel. Already as a child he liked growing fruits and learnt to prune apple trees from a gardener of his grandfather Döring and cultivated the garden of his parents. He visited the Gymnasium at Gotha but left without Abitur Regel earned a degree from the University of Bonn.

At 15, Regel began his career as an apprentice at the Royal Garden Limonaia in Gotha in 1830-1833 and in spring 1833 went as an adjunct to the botanical garden in Göttingen. He then worked in the botanical gardens in Bonn (1837-1839) and Berlin (1839-1842). In 1842 he moved to Switzerland to become the head of the Old Botanical Garden, Zürich. During this time he also worked as a lecturer of science. In 1852 he founded the magazine Gartenflora (Garden Flora), in which he described many new species.

In 1855 Regel moved to St. Petersburg, Russia, where he initially worked as a research director and later as senior botanist at the Imperial Botanical Garden. From 1875 until his death he served as the director of the Imperial Botanical Garden. While there, he oversaw the creation of some of the gardens (e.g. the Admiralty garden) and the facility laboratory. He was a founder and vice-president of the Russian Gardening Society and a number of academic journals. In 1875, he became an associate member of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences. Volume 111 of Curtis's Botanical Magazine is dedicated to him.

Regel died in St. Petersburg in 1892 and was buried at the Smolenskoe Lutheran Cemetery.

Plants named by him

Regel described and named over 3000 plant species. Many of the plants he named were from the Russian Far East and Asia as Russian Geographical Society expeditions where active in this area during his tenure at the Imperial Botanical Gardens in St. Petersburg.

Plants named for him

In 1843, J. C. Schauer named the genus Regelia in honor of Regel. It is a group of flowering plants in the family Myrtaceae which are endemic to the southwest Australia. In 1854, Planchon named the species Cestrum regeli (Potato family) after him, Robert Lynch in 1904 a subsection of Iris

Publications

Regel was an extremely prolific scientist and author. In addition to writing a number of major reference works in botany, he published 3101 articles in academic journals.

Selected publications

  • Cultur der Pflanzen unserer höheren Gebirge sowie des hohen Nordens, Erlangen 1856
  • Allgemeines Gartenbuch (General garden book) 2 Vols., Zurich 1855, 1868
  • Monographia Betulacearum (in: Nouveaux Mémoires de la Société Impériale des Naturalistes de Moscou 13: 59-187, 1861)
  • Tentamen florae ussuriensis (Tentamen flora of the Ussuri River Region), 1861
  • von Regel, Eduard August (1875). Alliorum adhuc cognitorum monographia. St Petersburgh: Petropolis. 
  • Tentamen rosarum monographiae (Monograph of Roses), 1877
  • Associates

  • Richard Maack Russian botanist, co-author, naturalist, and Siberian explorer.
  • Johann Albert von Regel (1845–1908; oldest son) Swiss born Russian Physician, botanist, traveler.
  • References

    Eduard August von Regel Wikipedia