De Jussieu system
An early system of plant taxonomy developed by Antoine Laurent de Jussieu, the de Jussieu System' (1789), is of great importance as a starting point of botanical nomenclature at the rank of family, together with Michel Adanson's Familles naturelles des plantes (1763). While Adanson introduced the concept of families, Jussieu arranged them hierarchically into Divisions, Classes and Orders (equivalent to families).[1]
- Index: Structured p. lxiii, Alphabetical p. 454
- Overview: Page lxxi - Divisions and classes
- Overview: Page lxii - Classes and orders
The main groups recognized are:
- I. Acotyledones (page 1)
- Classes: 1, with as families: Fungi, Algae, Hepaticae, Musci, Filices, Najades
- II. Monocotyledones (page 21)
- Classes: 2-4
- 2: Stamina hypogyna (page 23)
- 3: Stamina perigyna (page 35)
- 4: Stamina epigyna (page 60)
- III. Dicotyledones (page 70)
- A. Monoclinae
- a) Apetalae
- Classes: 5-7
- 5: Stamina epigyna (page 72)
- 6: Stamina perigyna (page 72)
- 7: Stamina hypogyna (page 86)
- b) Monopetalae
- Classes: 8-11
- b) Monopetalae
- 8: Corolla hypogyna (page 93)
- 9: Corolla perigyna (page 153)
- 10: Corolla epigyna: antheris connatis (page 166)
- 11: Corolla epigyna: antheris distinctis (page 193)
- c) Polypetalae
- Classes: 12-14
- c) Polypetalae
- 12: Stamina epigyna (page 216)
- 13: Stamina hypogyna (page 228)
- 22 Orders
- ...
- 11. Ordo XX Cisti (page 294)
- ...
- 14: Stamina perigyna (page 305) 13 orders
- B. Diclinae (page 383)
- Classes: 15
- B. Diclinae (page 383)
References
Bibliography
- Jussieu, Antoine Laurent de (1789). Genera plantarum: secundum ordines naturales disposita, juxta methodum in Horto regio parisiensi exaratam, anno M.DCC.LXXIV (in Latin). Paris. OCLC 5161409.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)(also available at Gallica))
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