ABSTRACT

In Leiden too a remarkable cluster of plant experts, ower lovers and naturalia collectors emerged in the 1590s. Given the relative distance from the ports of Amsterdam and Middelburg, it is tempting to regard Leiden university as the principal motor of the interest in nature. But the university was only founded in 1575 – as a symbol of the independence of the new Dutch Republic – and the study of living nature there did not have a particularly quick start. In fact, no speci c institutional interest seems to have been taken in natural history at all in Leiden university during at least the rst decade of its existence. Medical botany was not taught there until 1587-8, and the botanical garden in Leiden – as a garden rather than as a project on paper – was created only in 1594, almost twenty years a er the foundation of the university.1 To get to grips with natural history in Leiden in the 1590s and early 1600s, we therefore cannot limit ourselves to the academic sphere and certainly not to that of book learning or teaching from books, but have to look at people and practices in a wider, local, regional and even international context.