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Hortus Eystettensis

Engraving
1613 (published)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is a plate from a magnificent florilegium (a decorative flower book), which was published in the German city of Nuremberg in 1613. The Hortus Eystettensis contains 374 plates that illustrate more than 1,000 flowering plants in the gardens of the Prince-Bishop of Eichstatt. Besler worked on the drawings on and off over a period of 16 years. The illustrations are notable for their elegant design and decorative layout. Each page shows several plants, as here. Each plant is shown with its roots and all, in accordance with the conventions of botanical illustration at the time. The plants are illustrated in order by their season of flowering. An intact copy of the Hortus Eystettensis is in the National Art Library at the V&A. It is a 'white', that is, an uncoloured copy.

As the first of its kind, this book triggered a rush of similar books commissioned by the owners of notable gardens for their personal delight and as a way of showing others that they had the means to cultivate such outstanding floral collections. Because these books were produced primarily as statements of possession, they rarely contained any useful text. Nevertheless they did provide botanists with a record of the new and exotic species arriving in Europe from abroad, and were also useful to designers as a pattern source.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleHortus Eystettensis (series title)
Materials and techniques
Engraving, coloured by hand
Brief description
Tassel Grape Hyacinth (Muscari comosum) and other flowers; hand-coloured engraving by Wolfgang Kilian (1581-1662) after Basil Besler (1561-1629); 1613; Augsburg; plate from 'Hortus Eystettensis (Nuremburg, 1613), vol. i
Physical description
Engraving
Dimensions
  • Height: 56cm
  • Width: 45.2cm
Gallery label
Basil Besler 1561-1629
Tassel Grape Hyacinth ('Muscari comosum') and Other Flowers
1613

The 'Hortus Eystettensis' is the earliest pictorial record of flowers in a single garden, that of the Prince Bishop of Eichstatt. It shows more than one thousand plants and is also one of the first botanical books to be illustated with engraved plates. As you can see in the intertwining leaves of the central hyacinth, the plates are strikingly decorative.

Augsburg
Hand-coloured engraving; by Wolfgang Kilian (1581-1662)
Plate from 'Hortus Eystettensis' (Nürnberg, 1613), vol.i
V&A: Circ.526-1967
Subjects depicted
Summary
This is a plate from a magnificent florilegium (a decorative flower book), which was published in the German city of Nuremberg in 1613. The Hortus Eystettensis contains 374 plates that illustrate more than 1,000 flowering plants in the gardens of the Prince-Bishop of Eichstatt. Besler worked on the drawings on and off over a period of 16 years. The illustrations are notable for their elegant design and decorative layout. Each page shows several plants, as here. Each plant is shown with its roots and all, in accordance with the conventions of botanical illustration at the time. The plants are illustrated in order by their season of flowering. An intact copy of the Hortus Eystettensis is in the National Art Library at the V&A. It is a 'white', that is, an uncoloured copy.

As the first of its kind, this book triggered a rush of similar books commissioned by the owners of notable gardens for their personal delight and as a way of showing others that they had the means to cultivate such outstanding floral collections. Because these books were produced primarily as statements of possession, they rarely contained any useful text. Nevertheless they did provide botanists with a record of the new and exotic species arriving in Europe from abroad, and were also useful to designers as a pattern source.
Bibliographic reference
Besler, Basil. Hortus Eystettensis. Eichstätt, Nuremberg, 1613. Departmental Circulation Register 1967
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.526-1967

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Record createdFebruary 13, 2004
Record URL
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