224 BIBLIOGRAPHIES 



Robert John Thornton. 



1810. A Family Herbal : a Familiar Account of the Medical Properties of 

 British and Foreign Plants, also their uses in dying, and the various Arts, 

 arranged according to the Linnaean System, and illustrated by two hundred 

 and fifty-eight engravings from plants drawn from Nature by Henderson, 

 and engraved by Bewick of Newcastle. By Robert John Thornton, M.D., 

 Member of the University of Cambridge, and of the Royal London College 

 of Physicians; Lecturer on Botany at Guy's Hospital; Author of a 

 Grammar of Botany, the Philosophy of Medicine, etc. London : Printed 

 for B. & R. Crosby and Co., Stationer's Court, Ludgate Street. 



1814. Second edition. 



Jonathan Stokes. 



1812. A Botanical Materia Medica, Consisting of the Generic and Specific 

 Characters of the Plants used in Medicine and Diet, with Synonyms, And 

 references to Medical authors, By Jonathan Stokes, M.D. In Four volumes. 

 London, Printed for J. Johnson and Co. St. Paul's Churchyard. 1812. 



Thomas Green. 



1816. The Universal Herbal ; or, Botanical, Medical, and Agricultural Diction- 

 ary. Containing an account of All the known plants in the World, 

 arranged according to the Linnean System. Specifying the uses to which 

 they are or may be applied, whether as Food, as Medicine, or in the Arts 

 and Manufactures. With the best methods of Propagation, and the most 

 recent agricultural improvements. Collected from indisputable Authorities. 

 Adapted to the use of the Farmer the Gardener the Husbandman the 

 Botanist the Florist and Country Housekeepers in General. By 

 Thomas Green. Liverpool. Printed at the Caxton Press by Henry 

 Fisher, Printer in Ordinary to His Majesty. Sold at 87, Bartholomew 

 Close, London. 



1824. Second edition. 



John Lindley. 



1838. Flora Medica; A Botanical Account of all the more important plants 

 used in Medicine, in different parts of the world. By John Lindley, 

 Ph.D., F.R.S., Professor of Botany in University College, London; Vice- 

 Secretary of the Horticultural Society, etc. etc. etc. London : Printed for 

 Longman, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longmans, Paternoster-Row. 1838. 



The majority of sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century gardening 

 books devote considerable space to herbs. See especially : 

 1563. Thomas Hill. The proffitable Arte of Gardening. 

 1594. Sir Hugh Platt. The Garden of Eden. 



1617. Gervase Markham. The Country Housewife's Garden. 



1618. William Lawson. A new Orchard and Garden with the Country 

 Housewife's Garden. 



