The Classes and Orders of the Linnaean System of Botany (1816)
Complete Three-Volume Set • Hand-Colored Plates • Regency-Era Binding
A magnificent early nineteenth-century botanical landmark—this complete three-volume 1816 set of The Classes and Orders of the Linnaean System of Botany beautifully unites Regency printing, scientific revolution, and fine natural-history art.
Printed by Thomas Bensley, one of London’s most esteemed presses, and published by Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme & Brown, this work was created at a moment when science and aesthetics were inseparable. Its purpose: to translate Carl Linnaeus’s groundbreaking classification system into a richly illustrated, accessible visual guide for scholars, collectors, and the growing botanical elite of the 19th century.
Across all three volumes, readers are met with delicately hand-colored engraved plates, each featuring a meticulously rendered plant specimen—petals, stems, and foliage lightly washed in watercolor by hand. These illustrations bring together British native species and newly discovered exotics arriving from global expeditions of the era. Every plate is both scientific and poetic—exact in structure, yet warm and alive with early-Victorian artistic finesse.
The set is bound in contemporary half calf with marbled boards, featuring gilt-ruled spines and period titling. This style was typical of serious natural-history libraries of the Regency period, and today it remains a beautifully preserved example of early 19th-century craftsmanship. The pages show expected light foxing and toning consistent with age, giving the work that desirable, honest patina collectors love.
This is not simply a botanical book—it is a window into a world where observing nature was considered an act of scholarship, exploration, and beauty. Nearly 210 years old, this set stands as a testament to a formative moment in the history of science and natural illustration.
Details
- Title: The Classes and Orders of the Linnaean System of Botany
- Volumes: Complete set of 3
- Year: 1816
- Printer: T. Bensley, London
- Publisher: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme & Brown
- Binding: Contemporary half calf, marbled boards, gilt-ruled spines
- Illustrations: Numerous engraved hand-colored botanical plates
- Condition: Strong bindings, attractive plates; expected foxing, toning, and light wear appropriate for 200+ years
Why We Love It
These volumes radiate old-world charm—fine leather bindings, soft hand-colored plates, and a scientific legacy that shaped modern botany. They’re stunning on a shelf yet deeply rewarding to explore page by page.
The Classes and Orders of the Linnaean System of Botany (1816)
Complete Three-Volume Set • Hand-Colored Plates • Regency-Era Binding
A magnificent early nineteenth-century botanical landmark—this complete three-volume 1816 set of The Classes and Orders of the Linnaean System of Botany beautifully unites Regency printing, scientific revolution, and fine natural-history art.
Printed by Thomas Bensley, one of London’s most esteemed presses, and published by Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme & Brown, this work was created at a moment when science and aesthetics were inseparable. Its purpose: to translate Carl Linnaeus’s groundbreaking classification system into a richly illustrated, accessible visual guide for scholars, collectors, and the growing botanical elite of the 19th century.
Across all three volumes, readers are met with delicately hand-colored engraved plates, each featuring a meticulously rendered plant specimen—petals, stems, and foliage lightly washed in watercolor by hand. These illustrations bring together British native species and newly discovered exotics arriving from global expeditions of the era. Every plate is both scientific and poetic—exact in structure, yet warm and alive with early-Victorian artistic finesse.
The set is bound in contemporary half calf with marbled boards, featuring gilt-ruled spines and period titling. This style was typical of serious natural-history libraries of the Regency period, and today it remains a beautifully preserved example of early 19th-century craftsmanship. The pages show expected light foxing and toning consistent with age, giving the work that desirable, honest patina collectors love.
This is not simply a botanical book—it is a window into a world where observing nature was considered an act of scholarship, exploration, and beauty. Nearly 210 years old, this set stands as a testament to a formative moment in the history of science and natural illustration.
Details
- Title: The Classes and Orders of the Linnaean System of Botany
- Volumes: Complete set of 3
- Year: 1816
- Printer: T. Bensley, London
- Publisher: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme & Brown
- Binding: Contemporary half calf, marbled boards, gilt-ruled spines
- Illustrations: Numerous engraved hand-colored botanical plates
- Condition: Strong bindings, attractive plates; expected foxing, toning, and light wear appropriate for 200+ years
Why We Love It
These volumes radiate old-world charm—fine leather bindings, soft hand-colored plates, and a scientific legacy that shaped modern botany. They’re stunning on a shelf yet deeply rewarding to explore page by page.