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DOI 10.1007/s12038-013-9316-9
Natural history in India during the 18th and 19th centuries
RAJESH KOCHHAR
Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Mohali 140 306, Punjab
(Email, [email protected])
1. Introduction
European access to India was multi-dimensional: The merchant-rulers were keen to identify commodities that could be profitably exported to Europe, cultivate commercial plants in India that grew outside their possessions, and find substitutes for drugs and simples that were obtained from the Americas. The ever-increasing scientific community in Europe was excited about the opportunities that the vast landmass of India offered in natural history studies. On their part, the Christianity enthusiasts in Europe viewed European rule in India as a godsend for propagating the Gospel in the East. These seemingly diverse interests converged at various levels. Christian missionaries as a body were the first educated Europeans in India. As in philology, they were pioneers in natural history also. They constituted a valuable resource for naturalists in Europe. European interest in their field work brought them scientific recognition as well as the much needed cash. More significantly, they introduced the colonial administrators, especially the medical men, to systematic botany.
One can make a clear distinction between pre-Linnaean and Linnaean phases in European foray into Indian natural history. Europe was introduced to western Indian drugs and simples by the 1563 work of the Goa-based Portuguese physician Garcia dOrta (1501/21568). A century later, during 16781693, the Dutch administrator Hendrik Adriaan van Rheede tot Drakenstein (16361691) furnished Europe with information from South India. In both cases, the initiative originated in the colonies itself (Kochhar 2012). Things changed in the second half of the 18th century. Now, individual European naturalists and institutions wanted not only specimens from India but also bits of tacit knowledge resident in the local population. European India was ready and willing to oblige, but as a collaborator rather than a
courier. We shall focus on India-based Europeans who built a scientific reputation for themselves; there were of course others who merely served as suppliers.
2. Tranquebar and Madras (17681793)
As in geography, the earliest centre for botanical and zoological research was South India. Europe-dictated scientific botany was begun in India by a direct pupil of Linnaeus not in the British possessions but in the tiny Danish...