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Linnaeus, The Name Giver
Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus was an early information architect. He believed that every kind of plant and animal on Earth should be named and classified.
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Fuchsia blossom, which has eight male stamens around a female pistil. He also compared the sexual parts of each numbered class to complex human relationships. He described class 8, for example, which included the
Fuchsia,
as "eight men in the same bridal suite with one woman."]]>
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Salvia patens, gentian sage, place it in class 2, which Linnaeus described as "two men in the same marriage."]]>
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Dahlia hortensis belongs to class 19, described as "The men have created a union with their sexual organs." Botanists now use a different system, but the bold enterprise of Linnaeus—classifying everything into groups within groups—gave a framework to modern biology.]]>
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Centaurea cyanus belongs to class 19.]]>
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Tulipa linifolia, is one of about a hundred known members of its genus, closely related to lilies.]]>
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Caesalpinia, from an earlier botanist who, like Linnaeus, was also a physician.]]>
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Symphytum, is useful for glue and "effective against blood-spitting," Linnaeus wrote.]]>
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Cirsium vulgare, seemingly far from a dahlia, also falls in class 19.]]>
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Malope (as in
Malope trifida
) is one of many coined by Linnaeus, who named and renamed thousands of species, bringing order to a chaotic body of information.]]>
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Erythrina crista-galli, the cockspur coral tree, is considered a medicinal plant in Argentina, where it is used as a natural sedative and a disinfectant. Linnaeus placed this species in the Diadelphia class, based on the arrangement of the stamens in its flowers—nine bundled around a pistil and one standing alone.]]>
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Magnolia stellata, or star magnolia, bears fragrant white flowers in early spring. Native to Japan, magnolias are garden favorites in the U.S. and are the state flowers of Mississippi and Louisiana. Linnaeus included the magnolia in the Polyandria class—plants whose flowers have 20 or more stamens gathered under the base of the pistil.]]>
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Urtica dioica inflict a burning sting if brushed against the skin, but the stinging nettle has long been valued for medicinal purposes. When cooked, young nettle leaves are used in herbal remedies for arthritis, anemia, asthma, and hay fever. Like the stinging nettle, other plants in Linnaeus's Dioecia class bear unisexual flowers—blossoms with only male or female sexual organs, unlike hermaphrodite flowers, which contain both.]]>
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Scabiosa) are preserved at the Swedish Museum of Natural History.]]>
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Cyperus papyrus represents one of thousands of species named by Linnaeus himself.]]>
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Adiantum raddianum, the delta maidenhair fern, to a class he called Cryptogamia, meaning "hidden marriage." He lumped mosses, lichens, mushrooms, and algae, among others, with the cryptogams—many of them so distinctly different from each other that they have since been reclassified.]]>
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Hoya subquintuplinervis—the wax plant—is a popular houseplant and garden ornament, with its scented five-petal flower clusters. Others in what Linnaeus called the Pentandria class—plants with five stamens—include
Lycopersicon
(tomato),
Daucus
(carrot), and
Nicotiana
(tobacco).]]>
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Musa ornata is a banana plant native to southern Asia. Linnaeus was the first person to succeed in growing bananas in Europe, simulating a tropical environment by letting the plants dry out, then providing copious amounts of water.]]>