RMP55T57–Stinking goosefoot, Chenopodium vulvaria. Handcoloured botanical illustration drawn by G. Reid and engraved on steel by Weddell from John Stephenson and James Morss Churchill's 'Medical Botany: or Illustrations and descriptions of the medicinal plants of the London, Edinburgh, and Dublin pharmacopœias,' John Churchill, London, 1831.
RM2A7NWME–Stinking goosefoot, Chenopodium vulvaria. Handcoloured botanical drawn and engraved by Pierre Bulliard from his own 'Flora Parisiensis,' 1776, Paris, P. F. Didot. Pierre Bulliard (1752-1793) was a famous French botanist who pioneered the three-colour-plate printing technique. His introduction to the flowers of Paris included 640 plants.
RMADPRHN–Stinking goosefoot, Chenopodium vulvaria, Uncommon in UK
RM2A7HF2E–Stinking goosefoot, Chenopodium vulvaria. Handcoloured copperplate botanical engraving from Johannes Zorn's 'Afbeelding der Artseny-Gewassen,' Jan Christiaan Sepp, Amsterdam, 1796. Zorn first published his illustrated medical botany in Nurnberg in 1780 with 500 plates, and a Dutch edition followed in 1796 published by J.C. Sepp with an additional 100 plates. Zorn (1739-1799) was a German pharmacist and botanist who collected medical plants from all over Europe for his 'Icones plantarum medicinalium' for apothecaries and doctors.
RMRYD4CR–Chenopodium Vulvaria Stinking Goosefoot
RM2DFBJW8–Stinking goosefoot or notchweed, La patte-d’oie fetide, Chenopodium vulvaria. Copperplate engraving printed in three colours by Pierre Bulliard from his Herbier de la France, ou collection complete des plantes indigenes de ce royaume, Didot jeune, Debure et Belin, 1780-1793.
RMD2TY0D–Chenopodium Vulvaria; Stinking Goosefoot
RFEW9MK1–Chenopodium vulvaria or Stinking Goosefoot or Notchweed, vintage engraved illustration. Dictionary of words and things - Larive
RMCTX618–Stinking Goosefoot Chenopodium vulvaria
RME4PHDC–stinking goosefoot, chenopodium vulvaria
RME4PH56–stinking goosefoot, chenopodium vulvaria
RMP5E6PH–Stinking goosefoot, Chenopodium vulvaria. Handcoloured botanical drawn and engraved by Pierre Bulliard from his own 'Flora Parisiensis,' 1776, Paris, P. F. Didot. Pierre Bulliard (1752-1793) was a famous French botanist who pioneered the three-colour-plate printing technique. His introduction to the flowers of Paris included 640 plants.
RMDDWDFE–Chenopodium Vulvaria; Stinking Goosefoot
RFEW99XG–Chenopodium vulvaria or Stinking Goosefoot or Notchweed, vintage engraved illustration. Dictionary of words and things - Larive
RMP5NFD2–Stinking goosefoot, Chenopodium vulvaria. Handcoloured copperplate botanical engraving from Johannes Zorn's 'Afbeelding der Artseny-Gewassen,' Jan Christiaan Sepp, Amsterdam, 1796. Zorn first published his illustrated medical botany in Nurnberg in 1780 with 500 plates, and a Dutch edition followed in 1796 published by J.C. Sepp with an additional 100 plates. Zorn (1739-1799) was a German pharmacist and botanist who collected medical plants from all over Europe for his 'Icones plantarum medicinalium' for apothecaries and doctors.
RMP555J2–Stinking goosefoot, Chenopodium vulvaria. Handcoloured copperplate engraving from a botanical illustration by James Sowerby from William Woodville and Sir William Jackson Hooker's 'Medical Botany,' John Bohn, London, 1832. The tireless Sowerby (1757-1822) drew over 2, 500 plants for Smith's mammoth 'English Botany' (1790-1814) and 440 mushrooms for 'Coloured Figures of English Fungi ' (1797) among many other works.
RM2T6CKFH–Stinking goosefoot or notchweed, La patte-doie fetide, Chenopodium vulvaria. Copperplate engraving printed in three colours by Pierre Bulliard from his Herbier de la France, ou collection complete des plantes indigenes de ce royaume, Didot jeune, Debure et Belin, 1780-1793.
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