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JAMES SOWERBY

  • James Sowerby
  • British botanical illustrator and mineralogist (1757–1822)

    James Sowerby (21 March 1757 – 25 October 1822) was an English naturalist, illustrator and mineralogist. Contributions to published works, such as A Specimen

    James Sowerby

    James Sowerby

    James_Sowerby

  • Sowerby family
  • British family of naturalists

    century. James Sowerby (1757–1822) James De Carle Sowerby (1787–1871) James Sowerby (1815–1834) William Sowerby (1827–1906) Joseph Sowerby (1829–ca.1871)

    Sowerby family

    Sowerby family

    Sowerby_family

  • James Sowerby (1815–1834)
  • James Sowerby (1815–1834) was a British botanical artist and mycologist, son of James De Carle Sowerby, grandson of James Sowerby. He published the small

    James Sowerby (1815–1834)

    James_Sowerby_(1815–1834)

  • James De Carle Sowerby
  • British mineralogist, botanist, and illustrator

    James De Carle Sowerby (5 June 1787 – 26 August 1871) was a British mineralogist, botanist, and illustrator. He received an education in chemistry. Sowerby

    James De Carle Sowerby

    James De Carle Sowerby

    James_De_Carle_Sowerby

  • James Edward Smith (botanist)
  • English botanist (1759–1828)

    Published and illustrated by James Sowerby. Linné, Carl von, Lachesis Lapponica or A Tour in Lapland, Translated by James Edward Smith (1811). London:

    James Edward Smith (botanist)

    James Edward Smith (botanist)

    James_Edward_Smith_(botanist)

  • The Secret Garden
  • 1911 novel by Frances Hodgson Burnett

    becomes healthier and less cantankerous. She befriends her maid, Martha Sowerby, who tells Mary about Lilias, who would spend hours in a private walled

    The Secret Garden

    The Secret Garden

    The_Secret_Garden

  • Leucocoprinus
  • Genus of fungi

    observation in a hothouse in Halifax, England. In 1793 British botanist James Sowerby observed it growing at Wormleybury manor, likely in the hothouses and

    Leucocoprinus

    Leucocoprinus

    Leucocoprinus

  • English Botany
  • illustrated, edited, and published by James Sowerby, the work featured technical descriptions primarily provided by Sir James Edward Smith, founder of the Linnean

    English Botany

    English Botany

    English_Botany

  • Sowerby (surname)
  • Surname list

    George Brettingham Sowerby III (1843–1921), British malacologist James Sowerby (1757–1822), British zoologist and painter James Sowerby (1815–1834), British

    Sowerby (surname)

    Sowerby_(surname)

  • William Curtis
  • British scientist and botanist

    work that would also feature hand coloured plates by artists such as James Sowerby and Sydenham Edwards. (William Kilburn is often erroneously cited as

    William Curtis

    William Curtis

    William_Curtis

  • Arthur de Carle Sowerby
  • British naturalist, explorer, writer and publisher in China

    missionary in China, the Reverend Arthur Sowerby, and Louisa Clayton. He was also the great-great-grandson of James Sowerby the botanist and founder of the Geological

    Arthur de Carle Sowerby

    Arthur de Carle Sowerby

    Arthur_de_Carle_Sowerby

  • Flora Londinensis
  • 1777 book by William Curtis

    included hand-coloured copperplate plates by botanical artists such as James Sowerby, Sydenham Edwards, William Kilburn and Fanny Blood. The full title is

    Flora Londinensis

    Flora Londinensis

    Flora_Londinensis

  • James Dowsett Rose
  • Irish malacologist

    then thought to be a new species and named as Patella clealandi by James Sowerby in 1822. He received specimens from others including Alexander McEwen

    James Dowsett Rose

    James_Dowsett_Rose

  • Astarte (bivalve)
  • Genus of bivalves

    of bivalve mollusc in the Astartidae family. It was circumscribed by James Sowerby in 1816. As of 2017[update], WoRMS recognizes approximately 33 species

    Astarte (bivalve)

    Astarte (bivalve)

    Astarte_(bivalve)

  • Telosma cordata
  • Species of flowering plant

    properties. Telosma procumbens illustration circa 1790 from James Edward Smith and James Sowerby – Icones pictae plantarum rariorum descriptionibus et observationibus

    Telosma cordata

    Telosma cordata

    Telosma_cordata

  • John Edward Sowerby
  • British painter

    17 January 1825. Part of the Sowerby family, he was eldest son of Charles Edward Sowerby and grandson of James Sowerby. John inherited a taste for botanical

    John Edward Sowerby

    John_Edward_Sowerby

  • Nemania diffusa
  • Species of fungus

    Xylariaceae Genus: Nemania Species: N. diffusa Binomial name Nemania diffusa (Sowerby) Gray, (1821) Synonyms Hypoxylon cohaerens var. brasiliense Starbäck, (1901)

    Nemania diffusa

    Nemania diffusa

    Nemania_diffusa

  • Golden Bough (Aeneid)
  • Object in Virgil's "Aeneid"

    interpretation was taken up by James Sowerby in his 1805 work English Botany, and through this influenced the anthropologist James George Frazer in choosing

    Golden Bough (Aeneid)

    Golden Bough (Aeneid)

    Golden_Bough_(Aeneid)

  • John Mawe
  • British mineralogist (1764–1829)

    Society. A number of Mawe's publications were extensively illustrated by James Sowerby and his sons, who specialised in detailed colour plates. Travels in

    John Mawe

    John Mawe

    John_Mawe

  • Peziza cerea
  • Species of fungus

    (Sowerby) (1962) Galactinia tectoria (Cooke) Galactinia vesiculosa f. cerea (Sowerby) (1960) Geopyxis muralis (Sowerby) (1889) Peziza muralis (Sowerby)

    Peziza cerea

    Peziza cerea

    Peziza_cerea

  • Flora Graeca
  • contained a hundred plates, except the last, and these were engraved by James Sowerby. Only 30 copies of this set were issued, another 50 complete sets were

    Flora Graeca

    Flora Graeca

    Flora_Graeca

  • James II of England
  • King of England, Scotland and Ireland from 1685 to 1688

    economic model, feared French power, and were outraged by James's authoritarianism. Scott Sowerby countered Pincus's thesis in 2013 in Making Toleration:

    James II of England

    James II of England

    James_II_of_England

  • Millicent Sowerby
  • English painter

    Sowerby. Sowerby was born in Gateshead, England in 1878 to John G. Sowerby, artist and grandson of naturalist James Sowerby, and Amy Margaret Sowerby

    Millicent Sowerby

    Millicent Sowerby

    Millicent_Sowerby

  • Pseudotremella moriformis
  • Species of fungus

    originally described from Surrey in 1812 by English naturalists James Edward Smith and James Sowerby. It remained in Tremella until 2015 when molecular research

    Pseudotremella moriformis

    Pseudotremella_moriformis

  • Leucocoprinus cepistipes
  • Species of fungus

    in 1796 by the English naturalist James Sowerby who classified it as Agaricus cepistipes or 'cepaestipes'. Sowerby's observations of this species were

    Leucocoprinus cepistipes

    Leucocoprinus cepistipes

    Leucocoprinus_cepistipes

  • Leptosphaeria maculans
  • Species of fungal pathogen

    (Sowerby) P. Karst. 1863". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. Retrieved 2011-07-05. Rouxel, Thierry; Grandaubert, Jonathan; Hane, James K

    Leptosphaeria maculans

    Leptosphaeria_maculans

  • Rigidoporus ulmarius
  • Species of fungus

     ulmarius Binomial name Rigidoporus ulmarius (Sowerby) Imazeki (1952) Synonyms Boletus ulmarius Sowerby (1797) Coriolus actinobolus (Mont.) Pat. (1903)

    Rigidoporus ulmarius

    Rigidoporus ulmarius

    Rigidoporus_ulmarius

  • Eucalyptus robusta
  • Species of eucalyptus

    Retrieved 11 April 2012. Smith, James Edward (1793). A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland. London: James Sowerby. "Australian Plant Common Name Database"

    Eucalyptus robusta

    Eucalyptus robusta

    Eucalyptus_robusta

  • Macropsalliota meleagris
  • Species of fungus

    mycologist James Sowerby who classified it as Agaricus meleagris and illustrated it in volume II of 'Coloured Figures of English Fungi or Mushrooms'. Sowerby stated

    Macropsalliota meleagris

    Macropsalliota meleagris

    Macropsalliota_meleagris

  • Chinese blackbird
  • Species of bird

    on the underparts. It is a large subspecies. Sowerby's blackbird (T. m. sowerbyi), named for James Sowerby, British naturalist and illustrator, breeds

    Chinese blackbird

    Chinese blackbird

    Chinese_blackbird

  • Clitocybe dealbata
  • Species of fungus

    muscarine. Clitocybe dealbata was initially described by British naturalist James Sowerby in 1799 as Agaricus dealbatus, its specific epithet derived from the

    Clitocybe dealbata

    Clitocybe dealbata

    Clitocybe_dealbata

  • Hamites (genus)
  • Genus of molluscs (fossil)

    early Albian, named by James Sowerby in his Mineral Conchology of Great Britain of 1814, although the genus itself was created by James Parkinson in his 1811

    Hamites (genus)

    Hamites (genus)

    Hamites_(genus)

  • Clavulinopsis fusiformis
  • Species of fungus

    species was first described in 1799 by English botanist and mycologist James Sowerby from collections made in Hampstead Heath in London. It was transferred

    Clavulinopsis fusiformis

    Clavulinopsis fusiformis

    Clavulinopsis_fusiformis

  • Inoceramus
  • Extinct genus of bivalves

    from the Early Jurassic to latest Cretaceous. The English naturalist James Sowerby proposed the name Inoceramus at a meeting of the Linnean Society in

    Inoceramus

    Inoceramus

    Inoceramus

  • Puccinia porri
  • Fungus that causes leek rust

    Israel, South Africa, and Brazil. "GSD Species Synonymy: Puccinia porri (Sowerby) G. Winter, Rabenh. Krypt.-Fl., Edn 2 (Leipzig) 1.1: 200 (1881)". Species

    Puccinia porri

    Puccinia porri

    Puccinia_porri

  • List of florilegia and botanical codices
  • 1790–95 Medical Botany William Woodville James Sowerby 1790–1813 English Botany Sowerby's Botany James Sowerby James Edward Smith 1792-97 'Mushrooms, toadstools

    List of florilegia and botanical codices

    List_of_florilegia_and_botanical_codices

  • Aspropaxillus giganteus
  • Species of fungus

    species was first described as Agaricus giganteus by English naturalist James Sowerby in 1809, who illustrated it in his book Coloured Figures of English

    Aspropaxillus giganteus

    Aspropaxillus giganteus

    Aspropaxillus_giganteus

  • Annulohypoxylon
  • Genus of fungi

    multiforme Annulohypoxylon multiforme Annulohypoxylon multiforme by James Sowerby (1803) Wikimedia Commons has media related to Annulohypoxylon. "Cramp

    Annulohypoxylon

    Annulohypoxylon

    Annulohypoxylon

  • Sowerby's beaked whale
  • Species of mammal

    toothed whale. It was the first mesoplodont whale to be described. James Sowerby, an English naturalist and artist, first described the species in 1804

    Sowerby's beaked whale

    Sowerby's beaked whale

    Sowerby's_beaked_whale

  • Pyronema
  • Genus of fungi

    circumscribed the species P. domesticum, directly building from the work of James Sowerby. "Pyronema Carus 1835". MycoBank. International Mycological Association

    Pyronema

    Pyronema

    Pyronema

  • Microbotryum scabiosae
  • Species of smut fungus

    Microbotryum scabiosae (Sowerby) Deml & Prillinger 1991 Synonyms Bauhinus scabiosae (Sowerby) Moore, 1992 Ustilago scabiosae (Sowerby) Deml & Prillinger,

    Microbotryum scabiosae

    Microbotryum scabiosae

    Microbotryum_scabiosae

  • Red-bellied black snake
  • Venomous snake native to eastern Australia

    zoological part by George Shaw, the botanical part by James Edward Smith; the figures by James Sowerby. Wagler, Johann Georg (1830). Natürliches System der

    Red-bellied black snake

    Red-bellied black snake

    Red-bellied_black_snake

  • Inocybe geophylla
  • Species of fungus

    first described in 1799 as Agaricus geophyllus by English naturalist James Sowerby in his work Coloured Figures of English Fungi or Mushrooms. Christiaan

    Inocybe geophylla

    Inocybe geophylla

    Inocybe_geophylla

  • Charlotte Caroline Sowerby
  • English painter

    Brettingham Sowerby I and granddaughter of the naturalist and illustrator James Sowerby. Like her father and grandfather, she became a natural history illustrator

    Charlotte Caroline Sowerby

    Charlotte Caroline Sowerby

    Charlotte_Caroline_Sowerby

  • Diaporthe eres
  • Species of fungus

    under various synonyms, for instance, the fungus was illustrated by James Sowerby in 1803 under the name Sphaeria ciliaris, attributed to Bulliard. The

    Diaporthe eres

    Diaporthe eres

    Diaporthe_eres

  • Carex sylvatica
  • Species of grass-like plant

    Flora. New Zealand Plant Conservation Network. Retrieved May 11, 2013. James Sowerby (1802). English botany. Vol. 14. London: J. Davis. Marek Nowicki, Radosław

    Carex sylvatica

    Carex sylvatica

    Carex_sylvatica

  • Sowerbaea
  • Genus of herbs

    Western Australia. The genus is named after the botanical illustrator James Sowerby. Species accepted: Sowerbaea alliacea F.Muell. - Northern Territory

    Sowerbaea

    Sowerbaea

    Sowerbaea

  • Sarcodontia spumea
  • Species of fungus

    especially maples. The fungus was originally described by English botanist James Sowerby in 1799. After having been moved to several different genera in its

    Sarcodontia spumea

    Sarcodontia spumea

    Sarcodontia_spumea

  • Paralepista flaccida
  • Species of fungus

    1772 as Agaricus inversus in his book Flora Carniolica, then in 1799 James Sowerby created a description under the name Agaricus flaccidus in his major

    Paralepista flaccida

    Paralepista flaccida

    Paralepista_flaccida

  • Hygrophorus cossus
  • Species of fungus

    Class: Agaricomycetes Order: Agaricales Family: Hygrophoraceae Genus: Hygrophorus Species: H. cossus Binomial name Hygrophorus cossus (Sowerby) Fr., 1838

    Hygrophorus cossus

    Hygrophorus cossus

    Hygrophorus_cossus

  • John George Sowerby
  • English painter

    producer of pressed glass in the world. The grandson of naturalist James Sowerby, his paintings were exhibited in the Royal Academy of Arts, and his

    John George Sowerby

    John George Sowerby

    John_George_Sowerby

  • Scott Sowerby
  • Canadian historian

    about James II of England's allies in repealing penal laws against religious minorities (such as the Dissenters and Catholics), a group Sowerby labels

    Scott Sowerby

    Scott_Sowerby

  • Leo Sowerby
  • American composer and church musician

    Leo Salkeld Sowerby (1 May 1895 – 7 July 1968) was an American composer and church musician. He won the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 1946 and was often

    Leo Sowerby

    Leo_Sowerby

  • A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland
  • Book by James Edward Smith

    the flora of Australia. Written by James Edward Smith and illustrated by James Sowerby, it was published by Sowerby in four parts between 1793 and 1795

    A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland

    A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland

    A_Specimen_of_the_Botany_of_New_Holland

  • Bush tucker
  • Food used as sustenance by Indigenous Australians

    of Australia, 1889, p.1 Smith, J E (1793). Spec. Bot. New Holland. James Sowerby. AMID all the beauty and variety which the vegetable productions of

    Bush tucker

    Bush tucker

    Bush_tucker

  • Haplomitrium hookeri
  • Species of liverwort

    ISBN 978-0-9561310-2-7. ISSN 0268-8034. Smith, James Edward (1813). English Botany. England: James Sowerby. p. 36. "Haplomitrium hookeri (Lyell ex Sm.)

    Haplomitrium hookeri

    Haplomitrium_hookeri

  • Rhizomarasmius setosus
  • Species of fungus

    This species was originally described in 1801 as Agaricus setosus by James Sowerby in his historic work "Coloured Figures of English Fungi or Mushrooms"

    Rhizomarasmius setosus

    Rhizomarasmius setosus

    Rhizomarasmius_setosus

  • Hygrophoropsis aurantiaca
  • Species of fungus in the family Hygrophoropsidaceae

    The specific epithet is the Latin word aurantiacus, meaning "orange". James Sowerby illustrated it and gave it the name Agaricus subcantharellus, describing

    Hygrophoropsis aurantiaca

    Hygrophoropsis aurantiaca

    Hygrophoropsis_aurantiaca

  • Acacia myrtifolia
  • Species of plant

    earliest plants described in the colony, having been illustrated by James Sowerby. Its specific epithet 'myrtle-leaved' is derived from the Latin myrtus

    Acacia myrtifolia

    Acacia myrtifolia

    Acacia_myrtifolia

  • Trigoniidae
  • Family of bivalves

    physician James Parkinson (the discoverer of Parkinson's disease) described examples of Trigonia and Myophorella. Later, James Sowerby and James De Carle

    Trigoniidae

    Trigoniidae

    Trigoniidae

  • Rhizomorpha
  • Genus of fungi

    of Rhizomorpha. However it is still a legitimate genus name. In 1799 James Sowerby published a mycelial cord species under the name Sphaeria hypotrichoides

    Rhizomorpha

    Rhizomorpha

    Rhizomorpha

  • Lentinellus vulpinus
  • Species of fungus

    Lentinellus vulpinus". Retrieved 12 February 2021. "Lentinellus vulpinus (Sowerby) Kühner & Maire". www.gbif.org. Retrieved 11 February 2021. Miller Jr.

    Lentinellus vulpinus

    Lentinellus vulpinus

    Lentinellus_vulpinus

  • Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape
  • World Heritage Site in southwest England

    Native Copper mineral specimen from Huelvor near Redruth. Hand-colored copper-plate engraving by James Sowerby, 1807.

    Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape

    Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape

    Cornwall_and_West_Devon_Mining_Landscape

  • Curtis's Botanical Magazine
  • Scientific journal

    Botanical Register. The credit for the first plate (Iris persica) goes to James Sowerby, as did a dozen of Edwards contributions. The first thirty volumes used

    Curtis's Botanical Magazine

    Curtis's Botanical Magazine

    Curtis's_Botanical_Magazine

  • Leucocoprinus birnbaumii
  • Species of fungus

    illegitimate. Nonetheless Agaricus luteus continued to be used and in James Sowerby's 1796 book entitled 'Coloured figures of English fungi or mushrooms'

    Leucocoprinus birnbaumii

    Leucocoprinus birnbaumii

    Leucocoprinus_birnbaumii

  • Euphorbia punicea
  • Species of flowering plant

    Drawing from James Edward Smith and James Sowerby

    Euphorbia punicea

    Euphorbia punicea

    Euphorbia_punicea

  • Sowerby Bridge
  • Market town in West Yorkshire, England

    Sowerby Bridge (/ˈsɔːrbi/ SOR-bi) is a market town in the Upper Calder Valley in Calderdale in West Yorkshire, England. The Calderdale Council ward population

    Sowerby Bridge

    Sowerby Bridge

    Sowerby_Bridge

  • Boletus edulis
  • Species of mushroom, widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere

    Early alternate names include Boletus solidus by English naturalist James Sowerby in 1809, and Gray's Leccinum edule. Gray's transfer of the species to

    Boletus edulis

    Boletus edulis

    Boletus_edulis

  • Tetrix undulata
  • Species of grasshopper

    of the British Isles : and chiefly in the possession of the author, James Sowerby. London 11-12:28, Pl. LXXIV Fig. 2 Orthoptera Species File. Eades D

    Tetrix undulata

    Tetrix undulata

    Tetrix_undulata

  • Bellerophinidae
  • Extinct family of gastropods

    Bibcode:2020NJGPA.298....9P. doi:10.1127/njgpa/2020/0929. Sowerby, James; Farey, John; Sowerby, James de Carle (1812). The mineral conchology of Great Britain;

    Bellerophinidae

    Bellerophinidae

    Bellerophinidae

  • Wold Cottage meteorite
  • Meteorite that fell in Wold Newton in 1795

    Piccadilly in London. The stone initially weighed 56 pounds (25 kg). James Sowerby, a naturalist, acquired the meteorite in 1804. The meteorite was later

    Wold Cottage meteorite

    Wold Cottage meteorite

    Wold_Cottage_meteorite

  • Edward Topham
  • English journalist and playwright

    inches of solid chalk rock. Part of it was exhibited at the museum of James Sowerby, London, and is now in the Natural History Museum, London. Topham published

    Edward Topham

    Edward Topham

    Edward_Topham

  • Botanical illustration
  • Drawing or painted image of plants and their components

    Dorothea Eliza Smith Matilda Smith Lilian Snelling Gerard van Spaendonck James Sowerby Sydney Parkinson Alice Tangerini Frances Elizabeth Tripp Elizabeth Twining

    Botanical illustration

    Botanical illustration

    Botanical_illustration

  • History of spectroscopy
  • pp. 33–36. Dolan, Brian (September 1998). "Pedagogy through print: James Sowerby, John Mawe and the problem of colour in early nineteenth-century natural

    History of spectroscopy

    History of spectroscopy

    History_of_spectroscopy

  • Almadén
  • Municipality in Castile-La Mancha, Spain

    Cinnabar from Almadén, hand-colored copper-plate engraving by James Sowerby, 1811

    Almadén

    Almadén

    Almadén

  • Tricholoma sejunctum
  • Species of fungus

    Société d'Émulation de Montbéliard (in French). 5 (II): 43–332 (see p. 72). Sowerby J. (1799). Coloured Figures of English Fungi. Vol. 2. London: J. Davis

    Tricholoma sejunctum

    Tricholoma sejunctum

    Tricholoma_sejunctum

  • Carwynnen Quoit
  • Dolmen in the Cornwall region, England

    Coloured Figures of English Fungi or Mushrooms, the English naturalist James Sowerby illustrated a yellow dust lichen, later identified as Chrysothrix chlorina

    Carwynnen Quoit

    Carwynnen Quoit

    Carwynnen_Quoit

  • George Brettingham Sowerby I
  • British naturalist, illustrator and conchologist

    Brettingham Sowerby I (12 August 1788 – 26 July 1854) was a British naturalist, illustrator and conchologist. He was the second son of James Sowerby. George

    George Brettingham Sowerby I

    George Brettingham Sowerby I

    George_Brettingham_Sowerby_I

  • Euspira
  • Genus of gastropods

    p=taxdetails&id=138239 on 2011-04-17 Fossilworks Sowerby J. 1837. Mineral-Conchologie Grossbrittaniens, von James Sowerby; deutsche Bearbeitung, herausgegeben von

    Euspira

    Euspira

    Euspira

  • List of malacologists
  • United Kingdom George Brettingham Sowerby III (1843–1921) United Kingdom James Sowerby (1757–1822) United Kingdom Gerard Spaink (1928–2005) Netherlands Leonard

    List of malacologists

    List of malacologists

    List_of_malacologists

  • John Templeton (botanist)
  • Irish naturalist and botanist

    Sir William Hooker, William Turner, James Sowerby and, especially Sir Joseph Banks, who had travelled on Captain James Cook's voyages, and in charge of Kew

    John Templeton (botanist)

    John Templeton (botanist)

    John_Templeton_(botanist)

  • Sowerbyella
  • Genus of fungi

    on page 118 in 1938. The genus name of Sowerbyella is in honour of James Sowerby (1757–1822), who was an English naturalist, illustrator and mineralogist

    Sowerbyella

    Sowerbyella

    Sowerbyella

  • Telopea speciosissima
  • Species of shrub endemic to New South Wales, Australia

    speciosissima, the New South Wales Waratah, was first described by botanist James Edward Smith in his 1793 book A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland, from

    Telopea speciosissima

    Telopea speciosissima

    Telopea_speciosissima

  • Dawson Turner
  • English banker, botanist and antiquary (1775-1858)

    collecting specimens in the field. In 1794, Turner offered to help James Sowerby with specimens. Turner published a number of books and collaborated

    Dawson Turner

    Dawson Turner

    Dawson_Turner

  • Chaenotheca ferruginea
  • Species of lichen

    2024-11-06. Sowerby, James; Sowerby, James; Boswell, John T.; Lankester, Phebe; Lankester, Phebe; Salter, John William; Sowerby, James de Carle; Sowerby, John

    Chaenotheca ferruginea

    Chaenotheca ferruginea

    Chaenotheca_ferruginea

  • Gideon Mantell
  • British scientist and obstetrician

    marl pits in Hamsey. In 1813, Mantell began to correspond with James Sowerby. Sowerby, a naturalist and illustrator who catalogued fossil shells, received

    Gideon Mantell

    Gideon Mantell

    Gideon_Mantell

  • Phoebe Lankester
  • British botanist known for popular science writing (1825–1900)

    English Botany, a publication that had illustrations by James Sowerby and other members of the Sowerby family. Lankester died in London on 9 April 1900, predeceased

    Phoebe Lankester

    Phoebe Lankester

    Phoebe_Lankester

  • William Woodville
  • English physician and botanist (1752–1805)

    between 1790 and 1794 with 300 illustrations of medicinal plants by James Sowerby was an important reference work for physicians in the nineteenth century

    William Woodville

    William Woodville

    William_Woodville

  • John Nugent Fitch
  • British lithographer and botanical illustrator

    1878, joining a select group of illustrators such as William Kilburn, James Sowerby, Sydenham Edwards, William Jackson Hooker and Walter Hood Fitch. Fitch

    John Nugent Fitch

    John Nugent Fitch

    John_Nugent_Fitch

  • List of mycologists
  • 1156–1158. doi:10.3852/11-050. S2CID 87815218. J. H. Barnhart (1941). "Howard James Banker (1866–1940)". Mycologia. 33 (4): 341–343. doi:10.1080/00275514.1941

    List of mycologists

    List of mycologists

    List_of_mycologists

  • Eucalyptus tereticornis
  • Species of eucalyptus

    Retrieved 8 January 2020. Smith, James Edward (1795). A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland. London: James Sowerby. pp. 41–42. Retrieved 8 January 2020

    Eucalyptus tereticornis

    Eucalyptus tereticornis

    Eucalyptus_tereticornis

  • Radiola linoides
  • Species of flowering plant

    Botany Department, The Natural History Museum. ISBN 978-0-9560144-0-5. James Sowerby and John Thomas Boswell (Editor) English Botany, Or, Coloured Figures

    Radiola linoides

    Radiola linoides

    Radiola_linoides

  • Henrietta Clive, Countess of Powis
  • British mineral collector and botanist

    Lady Clive contacted prominent collectors and mineral dealers, such as James Sowerby, John MacCulloch and the Countess of Aylesford. Her records show that

    Henrietta Clive, Countess of Powis

    Henrietta Clive, Countess of Powis

    Henrietta_Clive,_Countess_of_Powis

  • Pultenaea
  • Genus of legumes

    attached. The genus Pultenaea was first formally described by botanist James Edward Smith in 1794 in A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland. The first

    Pultenaea

    Pultenaea

    Pultenaea

  • Githa Sowerby
  • English playwright, children's writer and member of the Fabian Society

    England, into the Sowerbys, a glass-making family. Her father, John G. Sowerby, was an artist and grandson of naturalist James Sowerby, and her mother was

    Githa Sowerby

    Githa Sowerby

    Githa_Sowerby

  • Elizabeth Alexander (scientist)
  • British-born radio astronomer

    NLNZ.) Alexander, F. E. S. (1947). "A revision of the genus Pentamerus James Sowerby 1813 and a description of the new species Gypidula bravonium from the

    Elizabeth Alexander (scientist)

    Elizabeth_Alexander_(scientist)

  • Ulmus minor 'Sowerbyi'
  • Elm cultivar

    a hybrid of 'Coritana'. The tree was named for the botanical artist James Sowerby, who had illustrated it in English Botany, or Coloured Figures of British

    Ulmus minor 'Sowerbyi'

    Ulmus minor 'Sowerbyi'

    Ulmus_minor_'Sowerbyi'

  • 1822 in art
  • October 13 – Antonio Canova, Italian sculptor (born 1757) October 25 – James Sowerby, English naturalist and illustrator (born 1757) November 17 – Joaquim

    1822 in art

    1822_in_art

  • Dalston Hall
  • 15th century house in Cumbria, England

    Sowerby who owned the Putteridge and Lilley manor house estates. John Sowerby (1745-1823) was a wealthy merchant and landowner. His brother was James

    Dalston Hall

    Dalston Hall

    Dalston_Hall

  • List of botanists by author abbreviation (S)
  • Sirett Souster (1912–) Southw. – Effie A. Southworth (1860–1947) SowerbyJames Sowerby (1757–1822) Sowter – Frederick Archibald Sowter (1899–1972) Soyaux

    List of botanists by author abbreviation (S)

    List_of_botanists_by_author_abbreviation_(S)

AI & ChatGPT searchs for online references containing JAMES SOWERBY

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JAMES SOWERBY

  • Jamey
  • Girl/Female

    American, Australian, French, Hebrew, Scottish

    Jamey

    Supplanter; Holder of the Heel; Form of James

    Jamey

  • Fitz James
  • Boy/Male

    English

    Fitz James

    Son of James.

    Fitz James

  • Jamee
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Hawaiian, Hebrew, Scottish

    Jamee

    Supplanter; One who Replaces; Form of James

    Jamee

  • James
  • Biblical

    James

    same as Jacob, the Greek form of Jacob, supplanter (to take the place of another, as through force, scheming, strategy, or the like)

    James

  • JAMEY
  • Male

    English

    JAMEY

    Variant spelling of English/Scottish Jamie, JAMEY means "supplanter."

    JAMEY

  • James
  • Boy/Male

    American, Australian, Bengali, British, Chinese, Christian, Danish, Dutch, English, French, German, Greek, Gujarati, Hawaiian, Hebrew, Indian, Irish, Jamaican, Latin, Malayalam, Portuguese, Swedish, Swiss, Tamil

    James

    Supplanter; Jimmy; Variant of Jacob; Holds the Heel; He who Supplants; A Cheerful; Great; Lovable

    James

  • Sames
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Sames

    English : unexplained.German : possibly from a Germanic stem sam used of a personal name of unknown meaning.

    Sames

  • James
  • Boy/Male

    Shakespearean American English Biblical Hebrew

    James

    King John' James Jurney, servant to Lady Faulconbridge. 'King Richard III' Sir James Tyrrel....

    James

  • Jakes
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Jakes

    English : patronymic from Jack 1.Czech (Jakeš) : from a derivative of the personal name Jakub, Czech form of Jacob.

    Jakes

  • Jamese
  • Boy/Male

    Australian, British, English

    Jamese

    Form of James; One who Supplants

    Jamese

  • Ames
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Ames

    English : from the Old French and Middle English personal name Amys, Amice, which is either directly from Latin amicus ‘friend’, used as a personal name, or via a Late Latin derivative of this, Amicius.German : of uncertain origin. Perhaps a nickname for an active person, from a Germanic word related to Old High German amazzig ‘busy’. Compare modern German Ameise ‘ant’.William Ames, the son of Richard Ames of Bruton, Somerset, came to Braintree, MA, from England in about 1640. He had numerous prominent descendants.

    Ames

  • James, Jimmy
  • Boy/Male

    Christian & English(British/American/Australian)

    James, Jimmy

    Supplanter

    James, Jimmy

  • Janes
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Janes

    English : patronymic from the personal name Jan (see Jayne).Czech (Janeš) : from a pet form of the personal name Jan, a vernacular form of Greek Iōannēs (see John).

    Janes

  • Hames
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Hames

    English : habitational name from Hames Hall in Papcastle, Cumbria, named from the plural of northern Middle English hame ‘homestead’.

    Hames

  • Games
  • Surname or Lastname

    Spanish

    Games

    Spanish : variant of Gámez (see Gamez).English : variant of Game.

    Games

  • JAYMES
  • Male

    English

    JAYMES

    Variant spelling of English James, JAYMES means "supplanter."

    JAYMES

  • Eames
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Eames

    English : probably from the possessive case of the Middle English word eam ‘uncle’, denoting a retainer in the household of the uncle of some important local person.English : possibly also a variant of Ames.

    Eames

  • James
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    James

    English : from a personal name that has the same origin as Jacob. However, among English speakers, it is now felt to be a separate name in its own right. This is largely because in the Authorized Version of the Bible (1611) the form James is used in the New Testament as the name of two of Christ’s apostles (James the brother of John and James the brother of Andrew), whereas in the Old Testament the brother of Esau is called Jacob. The form James comes from Latin Jacobus via Late Latin Jac(o)mus, which also gave rise to Jaime, the regular form of the name in Spanish (as opposed to the learned Jacobo). See also Jack and Jackman. This is a common surname throughout the British Isles, particularly in South Wales.

    James

  • JAMES
  • Male

    English

    JAMES

    Middle English and Old French vernacular form of Late Latin Jacomus, from Greek Iakobos, JAMES means "supplanter." In the New Testament bible, this is the name of several characters, including two apostles and a half-brother of Jesus.

    JAMES

  • James Seamus
  • Boy/Male

    Irish

    James Seamus

    The Irish version of James. Many well-known Irishmen have been called Seamus including the 1995 Nobel poet laureate Seamus Heaney. The Nobel prize in Literature was awarded for his “”works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past.””

    James Seamus

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Online names & meanings

  • Koushikha
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu, Indian

    Koushikha

    Sweet Hearted; Nice

  • Chandeep
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Chandeep

    Bright of Moon

  • Zuhaa
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic

    Zuhaa

    Woman with Quality to Sacrifice

  • Harbajan
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian, Tamil

    Harbajan

    Gods Prayer

  • Mutharrif | موتحرریف
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Mutharrif | موتحرریف

  • Kalpesh | கல்பேஷ 
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Kalpesh | கல்பேஷ 

    Imaging of God, Lord of perfection

  • Aasmi | ஆஸமீ 
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Aasmi | ஆஸமீ 

    I am, Self-confident

  • Idun
  • Girl/Female

    Norse

    Idun

    Active in love.

  • Creese
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Creese

    English : variant of Creasy. There is probably no connection with modern English crease, which is first attested in the 16th century, from earlier crest.

  • Ghalia
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Ghalia

    Precious, Priceless

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Other words and meanings similar to

JAMES SOWERBY

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing JAMES SOWERBY

JAMES SOWERBY

  • Namer
  • n.

    One who names, or calls by name.

  • Jakes
  • n.

    A privy.

  • Quinquennalia
  • n. pl.

    Public games celebrated every five years.

  • Table
  • n.

    The games of backgammon and of draughts.

  • Jeames
  • n.

    A footman; a flunky.

  • Gray
  • superl.

    Old; mature; as, gray experience. Ames.

  • Binominal
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to two names; binomial.

  • Dice
  • v. i.

    To play games with dice.

  • Onomatologist
  • n.

    One versed in the history of names.

  • Lames
  • n. pl.

    Small steel plates combined together so as to slide one upon the other and form a piece of armor.

  • Multinominous
  • a.

    Having many names or terms.

  • Gong
  • n.

    A privy or jakes.

  • Fish
  • n.

    A counter, used in various games.

  • Gameful
  • a.

    Full of game or games.

  • Hellanodic
  • n.

    A judge or umpire in games or combats.

  • Jambes
  • n.

    Alt. of Jambeux

  • Trieterics
  • n. pl.

    Festival games celebrated once in three years.

  • Polyonomous
  • a.

    Having many names or titles; polyonymous.

  • Tamer
  • n.

    One who tames or subdues.