, a German horticulturist, who came to England about the middle
, a German horticulturist, who came
to England about the middle of the seventeenth century,
was appointed first superintendant of the physic-garden at
Oxford, founded in 1632 by Henry earl of Danby. Some
writers call him doctor, and some professor of botany, but
he was neither, nor was there any professor, properly so
called, before Dillenius. The “Catalogus -Plantarum
”
in this garden, published at Oxford in on rejoicing days
old Bobart used to have his beard tagged with silver.
” He
left two sons, Jacob and Tillemant, who were both employed in the physi-garden. Jacob, who seems to have
been a man of some learning, published the second volume
of Morison’s “Oxford history of Plants,
” several fine copies of verses
were wrote on so rare a subject.
” Bobart afterwards
owned the cheat but it was preserved for some years, as
a master-piece of art. Dr. Pulteney thinks Bobart was
alive in 1704; but he appears to have lived considerably
longer, as Dr. Abel Evans dedicated “Vertumnus,
” a
poetical epistle, to him in