Back to Search Start Over

Placing plants on paper: Lists, herbaria, and tables as experiments with territorial inventory at the mid-seventeenth-century Gotha court

Authors :
Alix Cooper
Source :
History of Science. 56:257-277
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2018.

Abstract

Over the past several decades, historians of science have come increasingly to focus on the role of so-called “paper technologies,” reorganizing and transforming information through the use of paper and pen, in the emergence of modern science. Taking as a case study an effort by administrators in the seventeenth-century German princely state of Saxe-Gotha to enlist foresters and herb-women to catalog the medicinal plants of the territory, this article analyzes the varied forms of paperwork produced in the process, including an extremely unusual table, and argues that the table represented an effort to produce a synoptic visualization, akin to but not identical to a map, of the location of the territory’s herbs. While this table may not have ultimately succeeded as a viable paper technology, due to problems of incommensurability, it demonstrates the role of administrative practices and state actors in experimenting with information about the natural world during the early modern period.

Details

ISSN :
17538564 and 00732753
Volume :
56
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
History of Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c0f4a25f5be52d747849358f5f7f3590
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0073275318776515