Pl. CCXXVIII: Kalmia, Foliis lanceolato... (after Robert Lancake) by John Miller
Pl. CCXXVIII: Kalmia, Foliis lanceolato... (after Robert Lancake)
John Miller
Pl. CCXXVIII: Kalmia, Foliis lanceolato... (after Robert Lancake)
John Miller
1715 - 1792 (biography)Kalmia, foliis lanceoato-ovatis nitidus... is plate CCXXVIII from Figures of the Most Beautiful, Useful, and Uncommon Plants described in the Gardener's Dictionary. The folio of 300 engraved plates was a follow-up to the major botanical tome, The Gardener's Dictionary, written by Phillip Miller (1691-1771), London's chief gardener at the Chelsea Physic Garden and a member of the Botanic Academy of Florence.
The original publication, written by Philip in 1731, was sparsley illustrated. Between 1755 and 1760 a two-volume folio of 300 hand-colored engravings was commissioned by an Act of Parliament, each detailing a particular plant's physical traits. Several artists were involved, including John Miller (born Johann Sebastian Müller, Germany) who recreated the drawings of Richard Lancake (fluent ca. 1755-1760) for the folio.
Kalmia
is a genus of around ten species of evergreen shrubs native to North America. It had only recently been brought to England by Mark Catesby, the English naturalist, when this illustration was created. While focusing primarily on plants of the British isles, the Gardener's Dictionary included several instances of plants from throughout the globe.