Luca Ghini
هذه المقالة تتضمن قائمة مصادر أو وصلات خارجية، ولكن تبقى مصادرها غير واضحة لأنها تفتقد إلى استشهادات داخلية. فضلاً حسـِّن هذه المقالة بجلب المزيد من الهوامش الدقيقة حيثما أمكن. (September 2025) |
Luca Ghini | |
|---|---|
| ملف:Scuola toscana, ritratto di luca ghini, xix secolo.jpg | |
| وُلِدَ | 1490 Casalfiumanese, Emilia-Romagna, Italy |
| توفي | 4 May 1556 (aged 65 or 66) Bologna, Italy |
| التعليم | University of Bologna |
| عـُرِف بـ | Creating the first herbarium |
| السيرة العلمية | |
| المجالات | Physician and botanist |
| الهيئات | University of Bologna |
| أبرز الطلاب | Gherardo Cibo, Andrea Cesalpino, Pietro Andrea Mattioli |
| Author abbrev. (botany) | Ghini |
Luca Ghini (Casalfiumanese, 1490 – Bologna, 4 May 1556) was an Italian physician and botanist, notable as the creator of the first recorded herbarium, as well as the first botanical garden in Europe.
Early life and education
Ghini was born in Casalfiumanese, son of a notary, and studied medicine at the University of Bologna. By 1527 he was lecturing there on medicinal plants, and eventually became a professor.
Career
He moved to Pisa in 1544, while maintaining his home in Bologna. He created the first herbarium (hortus siccus) in that year, drying plants while pressing them between pieces of paper, then gluing them to cardboard. None of his herbaria survive although the one by his student Gherardo Cibo made around 1532 survives. 1544 also saw the establishment of a garden for live plants, which became known as the Orto botanico di Pisa.
Ghini published no significant botanical work of his own, but was noted as a teacher many of whose students went on to significant careers, including Cesalpino (his successor as the director of the botanical garden) and Pietro Andrea Mattioli, the latter of which he helped by travelling around the Mediterranean and Near East in search for plants that matched the mystifying descriptions of Dioscorides. A Placiti revealing Ghini's methods was published posthumously.
References
Bibliography
- Isely, Duane (2002). One Hundred and One Botanists. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press. pp. 20–22. ISBN 978-1-55753-283-1. OCLC 947193619. Retrieved 2018-11-27.
- Toni, G.B. de (1907). "I placiti di Luca Ghini intorno a piante descritte nei commentarii al Dioscoride di P.A. Mattioli". Memorie del Reale Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti. 27 (8): 1–49.
- Sprague, T. A.; Nelmes, E. (1 October 1931). "The Herbal of Leonhart Fuchs". Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. 48 (325): 545–642. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.1931.tb00596.x.
| هذا biography related to medicine in Italy هو بذرة. بإمكانك مساعدة المعرفة بأن تنمـِّـيـه. |
- Short description with empty Wikidata description
- مقالات تفتقد استشهادات داخلية منذ September 2025
- علماء نبات ذوي مختصرات اسمية
- 1490 births
- 1556 deaths
- Botanists with author abbreviations
- 16th-century Italian botanists
- 16th-century Italian medical doctors
- Academic staff of the University of Pisa
- Medical doctors from the Papal States
- All stub articles
- Italian medical biography stubs