Patrick Browne

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Patrick Browne (1720–1790) was an Irish physician and botanist.

Career[]

Browne was born in Woodstock, County Mayo in 1720,[1] sent to relatives on Antigua in 1737 and returned to Europe due to ill health after two years. He studied medicine, natural history and especially botany at Reims, Paris, and Leyden, qualifying in 1743. He worked as a physician at St. Thomas's Hospital, London, visited Barbados, Montserrat, Antigua, and St. Kitts in the West Indies and settled as physician in Jamaica in 1746.

He corresponded with the botanist Carl Linnaeus, among whose papers were found fragments of articles on venereal diseases and yaws by Browne.

His major work, The Civil and Natural History of Jamaica (1756), illustrated by the botanic artist Georg Dionysius Ehret, contains new names for 104 genera.[2]

He retired to Rushbrook, near Claremorris, Co. Mayo in 1771.

References[]

  1. ^ Ray Desmond, Dictionary of British and Irish Botanists and Horticulturists (1994), p. 110.
  2. ^ Patrick Browne author, 1756 - Climatoloy, Medical - 503 pages The Civil and Natural History of Jamaica: In Three Parts. Containing, I. An Accurate Description of that Island ... with a Brief Account of Its Former and Present State, Government, Revenues, Produce, and Trade. II. A History of the Natural Productions ... Native Fossils ... III. An Account of the Nature of Climates in General, and Their Different Effects Upon the Human Body at Google Books
  3. ^ IPNI.  P.Browne.

Other sources[]

  • Nelson, E. C. Huntia 11 (1): 5-16. Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation, Carnegie Mellon University.
  • Nelson, E. C., & Walshe, W. F. (1995). Flowers of Mayo. [1]
  • Ricorso
  • National Centre for Biotechnology Information, [2]
  • The Civil and Natural History of Jamaica. In Three Parts. (1756) [3] Archive.org: Full online version, including 50 plates.

External links[]


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