fr Cinf unb Otto, Stöbtfcungen neuer fettener ©ercäcbfe 

 beö fönigL 6otamfd)eti ©artenö gu »erlitt. 5Rc6ft 95efd;rri= 

 bungen unb Anleitung fte gu Rieben. Berlin. (4.) 

 C. F. Ph. v. Martius, Amoenitates botanieae Monacenses. 

 *Unön>ai;t merfumrbiger ^ftanjen beö Fünigf. botani(d;en ©ar-- 

 tenö ju $0?»nd)eit in *MbbUbungcn unb 93efd)retbungcn , nebjl 

 ' ainteirung rücfftd>tad> tyrer Äufam granffurt a. SD?. (4.) 



@eii 1829 erfebeinenb, 

 c ©Triften/ weld)? nur foftematifd) georbnefe SSerjf ichnifTe »cm ©art«'» 



pftanjen, mit tnandjerlei nüftliti)eu Angaben bereichert, barfWlen. 

 F. de Paula Schrank et C. Ph. r. Marlius, Hortus regius 

 Monacensis. 23er$cid)nijj ber im föntejt. bctanifd)en ©arten 

 ju 57?änd)en roadjfenbcn fangen nad; ber natür(td;cu 90te 

 tbobe geDrbuet, mit ^inweifung auf baö £tnn£'fd>e 6t)|Iem 

 unb fummarifd>er Angabe beö SSaterlanbö , ber Äuttur unb 

 SSenufcungöroeife , aud) aU Schulfrei unb Ueberftd)t in beut* 

 feben ©arten unb für Äerbarien ju gebrauchen. 3Jtönd)cn 

 1829. (8.). 



R. L. Desfoniaines, Catalogus plai.tai-ura Horti regii Parisien- 

 sis com adnotationibus de plantis novis aut minus eognitis. 

 Editio 3 a . Parisiia 1829. (8.) 

 Sind) nad) natürlichen gamtlien georbner. 



U. Sweet's Hortus britaunicus, or a Catnlogue of Plants in- 

 digenous or culrivated in the Gardens of Great Britain; 

 arranged aoeording to their natural orders , with refe- 

 rences to the Linnean class and order to which each 

 genus belongs; the whole brought np to the present 

 time, and contains above 34 ; 000 Plants; by far the 

 greatest Nomber ever before published in any Garden 

 Catalogue of this or any other Country ; with their ge- 

 neric and specific names, habitats, when introdueed to 

 this Country, times of flowering, coJours of tbe flowers, 

 Accentuations ; and numerous other arrangements, fr* 

 the first tirae introdueed, with all the most usefull Syno- 

 nyms. Second Edition. London 1830. (8.). 



«/. C. London , Hortus britannicus : a Catalogue of all the 

 Plauts indigenous, cultivated in or introdueed to Britain. 

 The Linnaean arrangement, tho which nearly 30,000 



