John Forbes Royle

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Royle around 1851 redrawn from a daguerrotype

John Forbes Royle (10 May 1798 – 2 January 1858), British botanist and teacher of materia medica, was born in Kanpur (then Cawnpore) in 1798. He was in charge of the botanical garden at Saharanpur and played a role in the development of economic botany in India.

Early life

John Forbes Royle was the only son of William Henry Royle and Isabella Forbes.[

Himalayas.[1][2]

Saharanpur

In 1823 Royle was appointed as Superintendent of the botanical garden at Saharanpur which had been established by the East India Company in 1750 with the aim of promoting the introduction of new crops of commercial value.[citation needed] Royle was assisted by Hugh Falconer who also took an interest in paleontology. One of Royle's major interests was in the traditional botanical remedies used by Hindu medical practitioners based on which he would later write On the Antiquity of Hindu Medicine (1837).[citation needed] He noted the effectiveness of many of these remedies. He also began a scheme of recording weather data at Saharanpur. He retired from service in 1831 and returned to England but continued to publish several books.[1]

England

John Forbes Royle (lithograph by G H Ford

Royle succeeded John Ayrton Paris in 1836 as professor of materia medica at King's College London, a position he held till 1856. He became a fellow of the Linnean Society in 1833 and the Royal Society in 1837. He made use of his collections to publish his Illustrations of the botany and other branches of the natural history of the Himalayan mountains (2 vols., 1839). In this work he suggested the introduction of cinchona to India stating that in "the Neelgherries a favourable site might without doubt be found for the cinchona".[3] In 1851 he superintended the Indian department of the Great Exhibition. In 1852, his recommendation for the introduction of cinchona was approved by the Lord Dalhousie, governor-general of India. Royle produced a report on this in 1853 but work began only in 1860, two years after Royle's death at Acton near London on 2 January 1858.[citation needed]

Botanical works

The work on which Royle's reputation chiefly rests is the Illustrations of the Botany and other branches of Natural History of the Himalayan Mountains, and of the Flora of Cashmere, in 2 vols. begun in 1839.[citation needed] In addition he took a special interest in fibre yielding crops such as cotton in his On the Culture and Commerce of Cotton in India and Elsewhere (1851) and The Fibrous Plants of India fitted for Cordage (1855), together with papers in scientific journals. He contributed most of the plant entries in "The Cyclopedia of Biblical Literature" edited by John Kitto. Royle suggested the idea of state protection for forests in his Essay on the Productive Resources of India (1840). The plant genus Roylea and Royle's pika (Ochotona roylei) are named after him.[1]

Royle's list of publications includes:

Personal life

In 1839 he married Annette Solly (1816–1894). They had a daughter Annette Jane and sons Joseph Ralph Edward John, William Henry Lough and Edmund Elphinstone.[4] [5]

The standard author abbreviation Royle is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.[6][7] John Forbes Royle Botanical Garden is names after him in Kanpur.[citation needed]

External links

"Royle, John Forbes" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 794–795.

References

  1. ^ required.)
  2. ^ Mackenzie, Holt (1858). "Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth anniversary meeting of the Society, held on the 15th May, 1858". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 17: i–v.
  3. ^ Francis, W. (1908). The Nilgiris. Madras: Government Press. p. 183.
  4. ^ Will of Elizabeth Barchard dated 30 November 1860
  5. ^ 1851 & 1861 census Acton
  6. ^ International Plant Names Index. Royle  Royle.
  7. .

External links

Media related to John Forbes Royle at Wikimedia Commons