Simon Syrenius

Simon Syrenius (Polish: Szymon Syreński) (1540–1611) was a pre-Linnean Polish botanist and academic. A native of Oświęcim, he taught at the Jagiellonian University. Anna Vasa served as his patron, and with her help, Syrenius published a botanic atlas in five volumes consisting of 1,540 pages describing 765 plants.

Zielnik (Herbarium)

Title page of Syrenius' Zielnik (Cracow, 1613)

The first edition of Syrenius' botanical atlas appeared in Cracow in 1613 under the title: Zielnik Herbarzem z ięzyka Łacinskiego zowią. To iest Opisanie własne imion, kształtu, przyrodzenia, skutkow, y mocy Zioł wszelakich Drzew, Krzewin y korzenia ich, Kwiátu, Owocow, Sokow Miasg, Zywic y korzenia do potraw zaprawowania. Tak Trunkow, Syropow, Wodek, Likworzow, Konfitor, Win rozmaitych, Prochow, Soli z zioł czynioney; Maści, Plastrow. Przytym o Ziomach y Glinkach rożnych: o Kruscach Perłach y drogich Kamieniach. Tez o zwierzetach czworonogich, czołgających Ptastwie, Rybach y tych wszystkich rzeczach ktore od nich pochodzą od DIOSCORIDA z przydaniem y dostatecznym dokładem z wielu innich o tey materiey piszacych, z położeniem własnych figur dla snadnieyszego ich poznania a y używania ku zatrzymaniu zdrowia tak ludzkiego iako bydlecego y chorob przypadłych odpedzenia, z wielkiem uważaniem y rozsądkiem Polskiem iezykiem zebrany y na osmiero ksiąg rozłożony...

The Zielnik is an illustrated atlas of practical plants, which includes information about the most important known and used plants in central and southern Europe in the sixteenth century. The work describes 765 plants, primarily medicinal ones, and their usage in the home, in industry, and in veterinary medicine. The recipes explain how to prepare plant medicines and food, as well as methods of pest control, how to treat farm animals, etc. It also records old folk traditions related to flora. Most of these descriptions are accompanied by woodcuts illustrating both the flowering plant and its roots, and sometimes its fruit and seeds as well.

The Zielnik was widely cited by Polish horitculturalists until the nineteenth century. The work was also popular in Russia, as evidenced by seventeenth-century translations now preserved in the National Library of Russia in St. Petersburg.

Contents

The Zielnik includes the following sections:

Bibliography

External links


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