THE ROYAL HERBARIUM AT MUNICH. 109 
Historia naturalis Palmarum. Fol. max. three vols., 1823-1850. 
Icones selecte plantarum cryptogamicarum Brasiliæ. Small fol. 
1826-1831. 
Flora Brasiliensis, s. Enumeratio plantarum in Brasilia provenientium. 
Two vols. 8vo. Vol. I. Cryptogama, auctor. Martio, Nees ab Esenbeck 
et Eschweiler. Vol. II. Agrostologia, auctore Nees. 
Flora Brasiliensis, ediderunt Steph. Endlicher et Martius. Nine 
numbers have been hitherto published. 1840-1847. Fol. c. tabulis. 
II. Jos. GERH. ZUCCARINI. 
Bemerkungen, &c. (Observations on Aug. de. St. Hilaire's Mono- 
graphy on the genera Sauvagesia and Lavradia). Bot. Zeit. 1825. 
Monographie, &e. (Monography on the American species of Ozalis). 
Munich Mem. vol. ix. 1823, p. 125, with nine plates. 
Nachtrag, &c. (Addition to the above). Ibid. vol. x. 1829, p. 177. 
Plantarum novarum vel minus cognitarum descriptio. Fasc. I. Ibid. 
p. 287. IL Vol. xiii. 1831, p. 309, with ten plates. IIT. Ibid. 
p. 597, with five plates. IV. Vol. xvi. part 1, 1837, p. 219, with nine 
plates. V. Vol. xix. part 2, 1845, p. 1, with six plates. 
Plantarum quas in Japonia collegit Dr. Ph. Fr. de Siebold, genera 
nova. Fasc. I. Munich Mem. vol. xvi. 1843, p. 717, with five plates. 
Zuccarini et Siebold, Flore Japonice familie naturales. Sectio I. 
Munich Mem. vol. xix. part. 2, 1845, p. 111, with two plates. Sect. IL. 
Ibid. part 3, 1846, p. 125, with one plate. 
Administration and wants.—It will have been seen, from the pre- 
ceding history of the rise and enlargement of the establishment, that 
everything was to be remodelled. The materials which gradually 
raised the herbarium to its present magnitude were multifarious, the 
access to them not properly regulated, and generally they were of sucha _ 
nature, that it was only after a long scientific inquiry, and the syste- 
matic determination of many thousand plants, that their exhibition and 
indexing could be thought of. The want of a proper locality at first, 
of the requisite presses and the like, and the small sum allowed for 
the herbarium, were great obstacles. Until the year 1827-28, it was 
under no specific board of administrators, and the most necessary funds 
for its support had to be taken from those of the Garden, whose 
directors could not conscientiously devote any considerable sum for that 
purpose. It was only after the present spacious locality had been 
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