| Literature DB >> 35697708 |
Anastasia Stefanaki1,2, Tilmann Walter3, Tinde van Andel4,5,6.
Abstract
Tulipa sylvestris, commonly called the "wild tulip", was introduced from the Mediterranean to northern Europe in the sixteenth century and became widely naturalized. Research has focused on tulips that came from the Ottoman Empire, but the introduction path of this native European, early ornamental tulip is unclear, and so is its taxonomic status: three subspecies are provisionally accepted, sometimes treated as species. Here we elucidate the history of introduction of T. sylvestris and discuss its taxonomy based on our historical findings. The first bulbs came from Bologna (northern Italy) and Montpellier (southern France) in the 1550-1570 s. Several renowned botanists were involved in their introduction, namely Gessner, Wieland, Aldrovandi, De Lobel, Clusius, and Dodoens. There were various introduction routes, including one from Spain which was apparently unsuccessful. The strong sixteenth-century Flemish botanical network facilitated the introduction and naturalization of T. sylvestris across Europe. Based on the latest tulip taxonomy, the diploid subspecies australis is native in the Mediterranean, and the tetraploid sylvestris is naturalized over Europe, but our historical findings show that both sylvestris and australis were introduced to northern Europe. This underlines the need to reconsider the taxonomic status of T. sylvestris, highlighting the importance of botanical history in understanding the complex taxonomy of naturalized cultivated plants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35697708 PMCID: PMC9192774 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-13378-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Tulipa sylvestris in sixteenth-century botanical books and drawing collections.
| Author/compiler | Source | Date | Type of evidence | Volume & page | Original name(s) | Morphology | Reference/link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Leonhart Fuchs (1501–1506) artist: Heinrich Füllmaurer? (ca. 1500–1547/8) | Codex Fuchs | 1543–7? | Image | 11.122: 291 | Narcissus serotinus luteus nondum dehiscens herbaceus ve Geler spater beschlossner oder griener narciss | Slender single-flowered | [ |
Leonhart Fuchs artist: possibly Albrecht Meyer (ca. 1510-after 1561) | Codex Fuchs | 1543–8? | Image | 11.122: 293 | Narcissus serotinus luteus dehiscens; Geler spater offner narciss | Slender single-flowered | |
Johannes Kentmann (1518–1574) | Codex Kentmanus | 1549 | Image | 1: 16 | Tulipa Turcica | Slender single-flowered | [ |
| 1549 | Image | 2: 46 | νάρκισσος; Lilionarcissus, Tulipae species | Robust double-flowered | |||
Pietro Antonio Michiel (1510–1576) | I Cinque Libri di Piante | ca. 1550–1576 | Text, image | 2: 21 | Narcisi gialli da volgari – Tulipa spetie | Double-flowered | [ |
Conrad Gessner (1516–1565) | Historia Plantarum | ca. 1555–1565 | Image (by unknown artist) | 2: 466b r | Narcissi Lutei odorati ex genere Tulipanor[um?] | Three robust plants, fruiting, single- and double-flowered | |
| De Hortis Germanis | 1561 | Text | 213 | Tulipa Turcicaa | – | [ | |
| Johannes Kentmann | Kreutterbuch | 1563 | Image | 64 | Gel Wolrichent Narcissus | Four robust single-flowered plants | |
| Image | 78v | Tulipa turcica | Slender single-flowered | ||||
Jacques van den Corenhuyse († after 1584) or Pieter van der Borcht (ca. 1530–1608)? | Libri Picturati core collection | 1565–1567/8 | Image | A30: 056v | Tulipa parva lutea. Monspell[iensis] | Three slender single-flowered plants and one fruit | [ |
| Unknown | Libri Picturati | 1566 the earliest | Image | A30: 062 | unnamed | Two slender single-flowered plants | |
Rembert Dodoens (1517–1585) | Florum | 1568 | Text, image | 196, 198 | Tulipa minor | Two slender single-flowered plants | [ |
Matthias de Lobel (1538–1616) | Stirpium Adversaria Nova | 1571 | Text | 51 | Norbonensis LilioNarcissus Luteus Montanus Tulipae species | Two slender single-flowered plants | [ |
Ulisse Aldrovandi (1522–1605) | Tavole Acquerellate | pre-1576?b | Image | 8: 97 | Lilio narcissus luteus montanus. Narcissus luteus. Narcisso lilium luteum. Tulipa lutea | Robust single-flowered | |
| Matthias de Lobel | Plantarum seu Stirpium Historia | 1576 | Text, image | 63 | Narbonensis Lilionarcissus luteus montanus, Tulipae species minor Monspeliensis herbariorum | Two slender single-flowered plants | [ |
| Text, image | 63 | Bononiensis Lilionarcissus luteus, sive Tulipa | Robust double-flowered | ||||
| Matthias de Lobel | Kruydtboeck | 1581 | Text, image | 160 | Gele berg- Lelie-Narcisse van Languedoc gheheeten in Nederlandt Tulipa van Montpelliers. In Latijn Narbonensis Lilio- Narcissus luteus montanus en de Kleyne Tulipa van Dodonaeus | Two slender single-flowered plants | [ |
| Text, image | 161 | Gele Lelie-Narcisse van Boloignien gheheeten Tulipa van Boloignie. In Latijn Bononiensis Lilio-Narcissus luteus sive Tulipa Boloniensis | Robust double-flowered | ||||
Andrea Cesalpino (1525–1603) | De Plantis Libri XVI | 1583 | Text | 10: 21 | Lonchitis (quidam Narcissum luteum vocant) | – | |
Carolus Clusius (1526–1609) | Rariorum aliquot stirpium | 1583 | Text | Tulipa Apenninea sive Bononiensis | – | [ | |
Joachim Camerarius (1534–1598), Pietro Andrea Matthioli (1501–1578) | De Plantis Epitome Utilissima | 1586 | Text, image | 958 | Narcissus VIII. Lilionarcissus Bononiensis. Tulipa minor. Graecis, λειριονάρκισσος πολύκλωνος | Robust triple-flowered | [ |
| Matthioli’s Commentaries, German edition | 1586 | Text, image | 443 | Narcissus IX. Tulipa Bononiensis | Robust triple-flowered (and four-flowered mentioned in text) | [ | |
| Joachim Camerarius | Hortus Medicus et Philosophicus | 1588 | Text | 125 | Tulipa Narbonensis et Tulipa Bononiensis | – | [ |
| Matthias de Lobel | Icones Stirpium | 1591 | Image | 1: 124 | Narbonensis Lilio-Narcissus luteus montanus, & parva Tulipa Dodonaei | Two slender single-flowered plants | |
| Image | 1: 125 | Bononiensis Lilio-Narcissus luteus, sive Tulipa Boloniensis | Robust double-flowered | ||||
John Gerard (1545–1612) | Herball | 1597 | Text, image | 116–7 | Tulipa Bononiensis, Italian Tulipa, Tulipa of Bolonia | Illustration: single flowered text: robust single-, double-, triple- or more- flowered | [ |
| Text, image | 116–7 | Tulipa Narbonensis, French Tulipa | Robust double-flowered | ||||
| Carolus Clusius | Rariorum Plantarum Historia | 1601 | Text, image | 150–1 | Tulipa Apenninea | Two slender single-flowered plants | [ |
| Text, image | 151 | Tulipa Narbonensis | Robust double-flowered | ||||
| text | 151 | Tulipa Hispanica | – | ||||
Basilius Besler (1561–1629) | Hortus Eystettensis | 1613 | Image | – | LilioNarcissus Bononiensis. Gelb wol-riechend Tulipan | Robust triple-Flowered | – |
Crispijn van den Passe (1564–1637) | Hortus Floridus | 1614 | Text, image | 20, 91 | Tulipa Bononiensis. Tulipa de Montpeliers | Robust single-flowered | |
Caspar Bauhin (1560–1624) | Pinax Theatri Botanici | 1623 | Text | 63 | Tulipa minor. I: Tulipa minor lutea Italica. an Narcissus octavus. Narcisso Constantinopolitano primo Matthioli. Lilionarcissus Bononiensis luteus, sive Tulipa Lob. Lilionarcissus Bononiensis, Eyst. & λειριοναρκισσος πολύκλονος, Cam. in Matthiolum. Lonchitis, Caes. Tulipa Apenninea Clus. hist. Italica prima, Taber. Tulipa Bononiensis, Ger. quae plerumque polyclonos, Cam. V: Tulipa minor lutea Gallica. Tulipa minor Narbonensis, Dodon. Narcissolilium luteum, Ad. Lilionarcissus Narbonensis luteus montanus, Lob. Tulipa Narbonensis, Clus. pan. hist. Cam. Tulipa Italica secunda, Tab. VI: Tulipa minor ex luteo purpurascens. Tulipa Hispanica, Clus. pan. & hist | – | [ |
Johann Bauhin (1541–1613) | Historia Plantarum Universalis | 1651c | Text, image | 2: 677 | Tulipa minor lutea Narbon [ensis] | Slender single-flowered | [ |
| Text, image | 2: 678 | Tulipa lutea Bononiensis | Robust triple-flowered |
Morphology is given when an image (illustration) is available. The indication “robust” or “slender” is an approximate estimation of flower size and leaf width. Links to the original sources are provided where available online in the last column or the list of references.
aRefers to Kentmann’s illustration of 1549.
bDating estimated herein based on the fact that de Lobel and the epithet “Bononiensis” are not mentioned in the plant names.
cPublished posthumously.
Figure 1The oldest surviving illustrations of Tulipa sylvestris come from Italy. Codex Kentmanus, 1549. Klassik Stiftung Weimar, 1:16, 40:[16]v (a), 2:46, 172:[82]v (b).
Figure 2Kentmann’s illustration of Tulipa sylvestris was influential in sixteenth-century botany. Conrad Gessner kept a copy for his Historia Plantarum and drew on it the seeds he received from Melchior Wieland. University of Tartu, call nr: Mscr 55, f. 3v (a). An early watercolor found in the collection of Leonhart Fuchs, also presents remarkable similarity to Kentmann’s illustration. It is suggested to have been made by Heinrich Füllmaurer in ca. 1543–1547, but it is possibly of a later date. Austrian National Library, Cod. 11,122, p. 291: Historia stirpium (“Codex Fuchs”) (b).
Figure 3Watercolor illustration of Tulipa sylvestris in I Cinque libri di piante. This manuscript was compiled by Pietro Antonio Michiel in Venice in ca. 1550–1576. It. II, 29 (= 4863), f. 21r, Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana.
Specimens of Tulipa sylvestris preserved in sixteenth-century herbaria.
| Compiler/herbarium name | Volume & nr | Dating herbarium | Dating volume | Origin herbarium | Origin specimen | Original name(s) | Morphology | Subspecies | Depository |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ulisse Aldrovandi (1522–1605) | 4:55 | 1551–1586 | 1552 | Bologna | Bologna | Narcissus luteus alter. Opitio Theoph. Bononiensis Lilionarcissus luteus Lobelii. Tulipa Bononiensisa | Robust double-flowered | Orto Botanico & Erbario, Universita di Bologna, Italy. Erbario Aldrovandi vol. IV, c. 55r | |
| 6: 195 | 1551–1586 | 1553 | Bologna | Bologna | Narcissus luteus maior. Lilionarcissus luteus Bonon[iensis] sive Tulipa Bonon[ensis] Lobell[ii]a | Slender single-flowered | Orto Botanico & Erbario, Universita di Bologna, Italy. Erbario Aldrovandi vol. VI, c. 195r | ||
Felix Platter (1536–1614) | 2: 123 | ca. 1552–1614 | – | Basel | – | Tulipa lutea | –b | –b | Burgerbibliothek Bern, Switzerland. BBB ES 70.2 ([ |
| 2: 107 | ca. 1552-1614 | – | Basel | – | Tulipae | Slender single-flowered | Burgerbibliothek Bern, Switzerland. BBB ES 70.2 ([ | ||
Francesco Petrollini Erbario B | 3: 839 | pre-1553 | – | Bologna | – | Narcissus luteus major | robust single-flowered | Biblioteca Angelica, Rome, Italy. “Erbario Cibo” | |
Francesco Petrollini, En Tibi herbarium | 9 | ca. 1558 | ca. 1558 | Bologna | – | Narcissus luteus | robust double-flowered | Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden, The Netherlands. L.2110826 | |
Leonhard Rauwolf (1535?-1596) | 3: 169 | 1560–1575 | 1563 | northern Italy | northern Italy | Narcissus luteus | robust single-flowered | Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden, The Netherlands | |
Andrea Cesalpino (1525–1603) | 603 | (1555–)1563 | (1555–)1563 | Pisa | – | Hemerocallis altera | Single-flowered | Museo di Storia Naturale—Collezioni Botaniche, Università di Firenze, Italy | |
Caspar Bauhin (1560–1624) | 3: 69 | 1579–1624 | ca. 1600–1621c | Basel | Montpellier & Hort de Dieu, Cevennes c | Tulipa minor Gallica | Three slender single-flowered plants | Herbarien Basel, Universität Basel, Switzerland. BAS-B03-069 | |
Unknown compiler, Erbario A | 214 | – | – | – | – | – | robust single-flowered | Biblioteca Angelica, Rome, Italy. “Erbario Cibo” |
The indication “robust” or “slender” is an approximate estimation of flower size and leaf width.
aThe plant names of Aldrovandi’s specimens were written at a later date. The uniform handwriting in this multivolume herbarium suggests that all plant names were written after the compilation of the last volume, so in 1586 the earliest. The mentioning of de Lobel’s “Lilionarcissus Bononiensis” (published in 1576) in the two specimens supports this hypothesis.
bSpecimen consisting only of a flower, the rest plant parts are not present.
cOrigin and dating of specimen estimated herein based on information on the label: “minor Monspelio a D. Cherlero : major a D. Saltzman. ex horto Dei”.
Figure 4The oldest surviving specimens of Tulipa sylvestris. They are contained in the herbarium of Ulisse Aldrovandi (a): 1552, vol. IV, c. 55r, (b): 1553, vol. VI, c. 195r. Orto Botanico & Erbario, Universita di Bologna.
Figure 5Specimens of Tulipa sylvestris collected by sixteenth-century botanists. Leonhard Rauwolf, northern Italy, 1563. Naturalis Biodiversity Center (a). Andrea Cesalpino, Pisa, 1563. Museo di Storia Naturale—Collezioni Botaniche, Università di Firenze (b). Caspar Bauhin, Basel, ca. 1600–1621. Herbarien Basel, Universität Basel, BAS-B03-069 (c).
Figure 6French Tulipa sylvestris came to northern Europe from Montpellier. Plants from this original material are probably depicted in the woodcut that accompanied the first scientific description of T. sylvestris published in 1568 by Rembert Dodoens. Biodiversity Heritage Library (a). The model used for this woodcut was a watercolor illustration from 1565-1568/9, which is part of the famous Libri Picturati collection. Jagiellonian Library Krakow, A30.056v (b).
Figure 7The Narbone (left) and Bologna (right) tulip. These woodcuts were reproduced many times in Plantin’s botanical publications. Here in Plantarum seu stirpium historia by Matthias de Lobel from 1576 (Special Collections, Wageningen University & Research – Library).
Tulipa sylvestris in mail correspondence of sixteenth century botanists and scholars.
| Sender | Recipient | Date | Original name(s) | Reference/link |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jean de Brancion | Carolus Clusius (1526–1609) | 3.8.1571 | Tulipa de Boulogne et Mompelier | [ |
| Carolus Clusius | Joachim Camerarius (1534–1598) | 30.7.1577 | Tulipas Bononienses et Mompellianas | [ |
Willem Jasperse Parduyn (1550–1603) | Carolus Clusius | 1.11.1596 | Tulipa Bononiensis diversa ab Hispanica et Narbonensi | [ |
| Jean Sr. Robin | Carolus Clusius | 10.4.1599 | Tulipan de boulogne | |
Francesco Malocchi (†1613) | Carolus Clusius | 8.11.1606 | Tulipa Bononiensis lutea odorata | [ |
Figure 8Distribution of Tulipa sylvestris in Europe. Black color indicates native occurrence and grey naturalized . Precise occurrence within each country is shown where available. Created with Adobe Illustrator 26.0.3, background map: Shutterstock, https://www.shutterstock.com .
Figure 9Illustrated history of introduction of Tulipa sylvestris in sixteenth-century Europe. Unlike the progenitors of modern tulip cultivars that came from the Ottoman empire (present day Turkey), the “wild tulip” (T. sylvestris) came from Italy and France, following the routes shown in this map. Plants from Spain were also introduced but apparently unsuccessfully (light grey). The depicted specimens (Naturalis Biodiversity Center), reflect the morphological diversity of the introduced plants: the French and Italian specimens are plants that have been collected in the Cevennes (L.1458540), Bologna (L.2110826) and the Apennines (L.1458536). The Spanish specimen (WAG.1057471) shows the presumed morphology of the plants introduced from Aranjuez. Infographic created by Alfred Heikamp with Adobe InDesign 2022 17.0 and Adobe Illustrator 2022 26.0.3. Background map: Shutterstock, https://www.shutterstock.com.