MAIN UBRARY-AGRiCULTLJRj BIOLOGY LIBRARY G •pt A REVIEW ; OF THE REFERENCES TO THE HORTUS MALABABICUS OF HENRY VAN RHEEDE VAN DRAAKENSTEIN. NOT PUBLISHED. SWANSEA: PRINTED AT THE CAMBRIAN-OFFICE, BY MURRAY AND REES. 1839. Q I 5 BIOLOGY LIBRARY G MAIN LIBRARY 'ULTURE DEPT. SEVERAL years ago I attempted to ascertain the names of the Plants which have been figured by Rheede and Rumphius in the Hortus Malabaricus and Herbarium Amboinense, and my late resi- dence in London has enabled me to find materials, which nothing but the libraries and collections of the Metropolis can furnish, for settling many of the doubtful synonyms. I have here arranged the notes and remarks thus collected on the former of these Works, and the Hortus Malabaricus has now been so generally cited in all works on Botany for nearly a century and a half, that this Review can hardly fail to be of some use, particularly to the Students of Oriental Botany. Op- posite to the number of each plate I have given, so far as I could collect them, the various synonymous names of the species to which the figure belongs, but more particularly those for which it has been quoted, and the names of the authors, when they have given a direct reference to the plate, are printed in Italics. In a paragraph below I have noticed those other references which I believe to be erroneous, and have offered a few occasional remarks on the species. Many of the notes were written at distant intervals, and some of the species have received much more attention, or been studied under more favor- able circumstances, than others; but, even where the true and false synonyms have not been rightly distinguished, the convenience of having all the references to each plate brought together will equally remain. To my friend, Professor Don, I am indebted for the faci- lities he has afforded me for consulting the botanical treasures which the Linnean Society has placed under his care, and to Messrs. Loddiges my best thanks are due for a free access to the vast col- lection of Tropical Plants which flourish in their stoves. L. W. DILLWYN. Sketty Hall, Dec, 25, 1838. LIST OF ABREVIATIONS USED AND WORKS QUOTED. A. DC. Alpbonse De Candolle— on the Myrsineae, in Transactions of Linnean Society, vol. xvii. Arnott On the Genus Rhizophora in the Annals of Natural History, and Author, jointly with Dr. Wight, of several other valuable Publications. Bentham Labiatarum, Genera and Species. Scrophularineae Indices. Blumc Bijdragen tot de Flora van Nederlandsch Indie. Floras Java? necnon Insularium adjacentium. Enumeratio Plantarum Java? et Insularum adjacentium minus cognitarum vel novarum. But. Mag. . . Curtis's Botanical Magazine, But. Rey. . . Botanical Register. Bot. Rep. . . Botanical Repository. Brown R. . . Prodromus Flora Novae Hollandias. On the Asclepiadeae in Transactions of Wernerian Society, vol. i. Browne. . ... Civil and Natural History of Jamaica. Burm John Burman — Thesaurus Zeylanicus. Flora Malabarica, sive Index in o nines Tomos Horti Ma- labarici. Ed. 1769. Index alter in omnes Tomos Herbarii Amboinensis. N. L. Burman (son of John Burman) — Flora Indica. Cav Cavanilles— Icones et Descriptions Plantarum quse aut sponte in Hispania crescunt aut in hortis hospitantur. Colebrook . .. . On the Indian Species of Menispermum in Transactions of Linnean Society, vol. xiii. Correct • Correa de Serra — on some Genera of the Aurantiacea? in the Transactions of the Linnean Society, vol. v. DC A. P. De Candolle— Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis. Catalogus Plantarum Horti Botanici Monspeli'ensis. Dcnn Schlussel zum Hortus Indicus Malabaricus. ..,.,, Desfontaincs in Aunales du Museum d'Histoirc Naturelle. \**) Desr. ...... Desrousseaux in Encyclopedic Methodique. Dillenius .... Hortus Elthamensis. Don. D David Don— Prodromus Florae Nepalensis. Don. G George Don— General System of Gardening and Botany or History of Dichlamydeous Plants, Dryander .... Observations on the Genus Begonia in Transactions of Linnean Society, vol. i. Dun Dunal — Monographic des Anonacies Forster Characteres Generum Plantarum. Florulse Insularum Australium Prodromus. Gcert , J. and C. F. Gaertner — De Fructibus et Seminibus Plan- tarum. Supplementum Carpologie. Gaud. Gaudichaud — Voyage autour du Monde du Capitaine Frey- cenet ; partie botanique. Gmelin Systema Naturae. H.SfG Hooker and Greville — Icones Filicum. Ham.. . . Dr. Francis Hamilton's Commentary on vols. i., ii., iii., & iv., of the Hortus Malabaricus in the Transactions of the Linnean Society. Ham. MS. . . Manuscript remainder of the above mentioned Work at the Linnean Society. H. Kew Hortus Kewensis. Hooker Sir W. J. Hooker— Exotic Flora. Botanical Miscellany, and other Works. Hort. Brit. . . Hortus Britannicus, edited by J. C. Loudon. Hunter Remarks on the Species of Pepper found in Prince of Wales's Island, in Asiatic Researches, vol. ix. Jack Malayan Miscellany. On the Malayan Species of Melastoma and on the Cyrtan- dracea3 in Transactions of the Linnean Society, vol. xiv. Jacq N. J. von Jacquin — Observationum Botanicarum. Hortus Botanicus Vindobonensis. Icones Plantarum rariorum. Jones Sir Wm. Jones — Botanical Observations on select Indian Plants in Asiatic Researches, vol. iv. Juss A. de Jussieu — De Euphorbiacearum Generibus Tentamen. Kcempfer .... Icones Selects Plantarum quas in Japonia collegit. Kaulfuss .... Enumeratio Filicum. Ker Recensio Plantarum hucusque in Repositorio Botanicorum depositum. Konig C. Konig— on ^Egiceras fragrans in Annals of Botany. Konig'sMS,. . J. G. Konig's Manuscripts in the Banksian Library at the British Museum. VII Lam Lamarck— Encyclopedic Methodique Botauique. Illustration des Genres. Journal d'Histoire Naturelle. Lehmann .... Plantae Asperifoliae Nuciferae. Lin. F. Z. . . Linnaeus — Flora Zeylanica. Lin. H.C. . . Linnaeus — Hortus Cliffortianus. Lin. Sp. PI.. . Linnaeus— Species Plantarum. Lin. Syst. Nat. Linnaeus— Systema Naturae. Lin. Mant. . . Linnaeus — Mantissa and Mantissa Alter. Lin. Supp. . . Supplementum Plantarum by the younger Linnaeus. Lind. Lindley — Botanical Register. Genera and Species of Orchidaceous Plants. Loddiges .... Botanical Cabinet. London Arboretum et Fruticetum Britannicum. Loureiro .... Flora Cochinchinensis. Martyn G. . . Edition of Miller's Gardner's Dictionary. Martynl. Historia Plantarum Rariorum. Maton On the Malabar Cardamon in Transactions of the Linnean Society, vol. x. Muhleriberg . . Descriptio uberior Graminum et Plantarum Calainariarum America) septentrionalis indigenarum and cicurum. N. Esen Nees von Esenbeck — Monographs of Laurineae and Acan- thaceae in Dr. Wallich's Plantae Asiaticee rariores. Monograph of the East Indian Solaneae in Transactions of the Linnean Society, vol. xvii. Osbeck Voyage to China and the East Indies. Pers Persoon — Synopsis Plantarum. Plukenet .... Plukenetii Opera. Plunder .... Plantarum Americanarum, edited by Burman. Poiret Continuation of Lamarck's Encyclopedic Methodique Bo- tanique. Supplement to Lamarck's Illustration des Genres. R.fyS Reamer and Schultes— Systema Vegetabilium. Ray Historia Plantarum. Rees's Cyc. . . Rees's Cyclopaedia. Retz Observations Botanicae. Richard .... Monographic des Orchidees des Isle de France and de Bourbon, in Memoires de la Societe d'Histoire Natu- relle de Paris, vol. iv. Roscoe Monandrian Plants of the Order Scitamineae. New Arrangement of the Scitamineae in Linnean Transac- tions, vol. viii. Roth Novae Plantarum Species presertim Indiae Orientalis. Catalecta Botanica. Vlll Rottl Rottboll— Descriptiones et Icones Plantarum rariorum. Roxb Roxburgh's Hortus Bengalensis. Plants of the Coast of Coromandel. Flora ludica. On the Scitamineae in Asiatic Researches, vol. xi. Rumphius. . . . Herbarium Amboinense. Saline On the Generic and Specific Characters of Chrysanthemum Indicum, in Transactions of Linnean Society, vol. xir. Salisbury .... Paradisus Londinensis. Schrader .... Sertum Hanoverianum. Scheuchzer . . Agrostographia. Schultes .... Mantissa Systema Vegetabilium. — See R. & S. Smith , . Sir J. E. Smith—Exotic Botany. Botanical Articles in Rees's Cyclopaedia. Sprengel .... Systema Vegetabilium. St. Hil Saint Hilaire — Exposition des Families Naturelles. Steudel Nomenclator Botanicus. Swart z Observationes Botanicae. Synopsis Filicum. Thunb C. P. Thunberg— Flora Japonica. Botanical History of the Genus Dillenia in Transactions of Linnean Society, vol. i. Vahl Enumeratio Plantarum. Symbols Botanicae. Vent Ventenat— Jardin de la Malmaison. Description des Plantes nouvelles du Jardin de Mons. Cels. W.frA Wight and Arnott— Prodromus Florae Peninsulae India? Orientalis. Illustrations of Indian Botany in the Companion to the Botanical Magazine and Annals of Natural History. Wight Contributions to the Botany of India. Wall Wallich— Plantae Asiaticae rariores. On Indian Plants in Asiatic Researches, vol. xiii. Willd Willdenow— Species Plantarum. Woodv Woodville— Medical Botany. HORTUS MALABARICUS. VOLUME I. Tab. rfc I Cocos nucifera. Lin. Lin. A. Faufel. Gcert. Borassus flabelliformis. Lin. Lontarus domestica. Gcert. 13. > Musa paradisiaca. Lin. M. sapientum. Roxb. 14.) Between M. paradisiaca and M. sapientum there is no specific difference, and of 44 varieties enumerated by Roemer and Schultes, this is the one which they have called Iminga. 15. Carica Papaya. Lin. Papaya Carica. Gcert. 16. Bambusa arundinacea. Willd. Bambos arundinacea. Retz. Nastus arundinacea. Smith. Arundo Bambos. Lin. Quoted erroneously by Roemer and Schultes for B. spinosa of Roxburgh. 17. Jambosa vulgaris. D C. Eugenia Jambos. Lin. 18. Jambosa malaccensis. D C. Eugenia malaccensis. Lin. 19. Michelia Champaca. Lin. 20. Mimusops Elengi. Lin. In the Asiatic Researches, vol. iv., Sir W. Jones says, ' Since it must require the imagination of a Burman to discover in them a resemblance to the face of a man or an ape, the genus will I hope be called Bacula, by which name it is frequently celebrated in the Puranas, and even placed among the flowers of the Hindoo Paradise.' A 2 HORT. MAL.— VOL. I. Tab. 21. Nyctanthes Arbor tristis. Liu. Parilium Arbor tristis. Gcert. 22. Cassia Fistula. Lin. Cathartocarpus Fistula. Persoon. 23. Tamarindus indica. Lin. 24. Garcinia Cambogia. Lam. Mangostana Cambogia. Gcert. Cambogia gutta. Lin. 25. Ficus glomerata of Roxb. Hamilton. F. racemosaVar. Lam. This figure has been quoted by Linnaeus, Burma*!, Willdenow, and Sir J. E. Smith, and in the Hort. Britannicus and Hort. Kewensis, for F.racemosa; but Dr. Hamilton has shewn that two species have been confounded under this name, and that it is Roxburgh's F. glomerata. 26. Ficus Benjamina. Lin. Mant. Quoted by Vahl both for F. Benjamina and F.pyrifolia, and for the latter by Sir J. E. Smith. 27. Ficus religiosa. Lin. 28. Ficus bengalensis. Lin. F. indica. Roxb. not Lin. Roxburgh of this plant says, ' I know of no other species of Ficus which sends forth fibres from the branches that descend to the ground and become trunks,' and this may perhaps have led him to arrange it as F. indica, for it is the only species which Linnseus has described ' ramis radicantibus.' There are, how- ever, other species which are at least sufficiently radicant to answer the Linnean character, as jP. tomentosa and F. infectoria; nor can this tendency mark any specific difference, for Dr. Hamilton, even of Roxburgh's F. indica says ' that it does not throw out roots from its branches when planted in confined situations and excluded from a free circulation of air.' — See Lin. Trans, xv. p. 133. 29. Thespesia populnea. Correct. Malvaviscus populneus. Gcert. Hibiscus populneus. Lin. 30 Paritium tortuosura. Hibiscus tortuosus. Roxb. This figure is referred to for No. 259 of the Flora Zeylanica, and also by Dr. P. Brown for a native of Jamaica, and these two species have been blended together with the name of Hibiscus tiliaceus in the Species Plantarum. By most subsequent authors, except Roxburgh, the Malabar plant has been quoted for H. tiliaceus or Paritium tiliaceum, but the name (derived probably from Plumiers) should be confined to the American species, and the H. tiliaceus of Roxburgh, if distinct from H. tortuosus, is a third species from the Molucca's. 31. Gossypium arboreura. Lin. No author has questioned the propriety of Linnaeus' reference to this figure ex- cept Roxburgh, who suspects that it may be G. religiosum of Gaertner, and Sir J. E. Smith, in Rees's Cyclopaedia, observes, that the Linnean G. religiosum is a very doubtful species. It is quoted by Dr. Hamilton for the variety of G. arboreum, which he has called Gf. nigrum, and the Doctor has recorded his persuasion, ' that what in general are called species of Gossypium are mere varieties, differing vastly less than the varieties of Cabbage (Brassica Oleracea) reared in our Gardens.' — Lin. Trans, xiii, p. 491. 32. Bauhinea variegata. Lin. 33. Bauhinea purpurea. Lin. HORT. MAL. — VOL. I. 3 Tab. 34. Bauhinca acuminata. Lin. 35. Bauhinea tomentosa. Lin. 36. Hydnocarpus inebrians of Vahl. W. fy A. Chilmoria pentandra. Hamilton. Munnicksia laurifolia. Denn. 37. Strychnos Nux vomica. Lin. 38. Phyllanthus Emblica. Lin. Emblica officinalis. Gcert. 39. Cerbera Odalam. Burman. Most authors have followed Linnaeus in quoting this fig. for C. Manghas, but Gartner has pointed out a difference, and it first received the present name from the elder Burman in the Index to the Hortus Malabaricus, which he published in 1769. 40. Lawsonia spinosa. Lin. L. alba. Var. Lam. Alcanna spinosa. Gcert. Lamarck has changed the trivial name to alba, and quoted this figure for a va- riety ' ramulis subspinescentibus.' — It is quoted by Roxburgh for L. inermis, but he admits that L. inermis and L. spinosa belong to the same spicies, and Dr. Hamilton, in the same hedge, has observed plants in all degrees, ' some having a great many branches ending in thorns, some only a few, and some none at all.' 41. Gmelina arborea. Smith. Misquoted by Linnaeus for Bignonia Catalpa, 42. Trevia nudiflora. Lin. 43. Bignonia indica. Lin. Calosantbes indica. Blume. In tne description of this figure Rheede has inadvertently called it 44, and in like manner has described the following table as 45 instead of 44, and so on with the remaining nnmbers up to 51, which has given rise to much uncertainty and irregularity in the references to these plates. In the Hortus Britannicus it is misquoted for B. indica, and also for Spathodea Rheedii. 44. Bignonia longifolia. Willd. B. paianelia. Hamilton. B. in- dica Var. Lin. Calosanthes indica Var. G. Don. By Roxburgh this figure has been quoted jointly with table 43 for B. indica, and by Linnaeus, Burman, and Lamarck, for a variety of that species. 45. Alstonia Pala. Echites? Pala. Hamilton. Mistaken by Linnseus for Taberncemontana citrifolia, and has been generally quoted by Lamarck and other authors for the Linnean Echites Scholaris (i. e. Alstonia Scholaris of Brown), but though nearly allied to E. scholaris, Dr. Hamilton considered it to be distinct from the Lignum Schohtre of Rumphius. Though there is an error in his reference, it is plain that the Linnean E. scholaris and T. citrifolia were considered by the elder Burman to be the same, but of the latter, as originally described in the Hortus Cliffortianus, it is said ' crescit in America.' 46. Tabernsemontana alternifolia. Lin. Linnaeus has obviously constituted his T. alternifolia entirely from this figure, and on a supposition that the alternate disposition of its leaves is a mere error of the Draughtsman, it has been quoted by Roxburgh for his T. crispa, and Mr. 4 HORT. MAL. — VOL. I. Brown has noticed its affinity with the New Holland T. otientalis. Mr. G. Don, however, suspects that it belongs to the same species as vol. ii. t. 54, which he has quoted with a query for his Wrightia Bothii, and again for T. coronaria. Tab. 47. Holarrhena Codaga. G.Don. Misquoted by Burman in the Flora Indica both for Nerium antidysentericum and Taberncemontana citrifolia of Linnaeus, and it hos been referred to by Linnaeus, Lamarck, and most other authors, for the former. Mr. Brown, in the Trans- actions of the Wernerinn Society, vol. i. p. 74, hns suggested that it belongs to Holarrhena. In the Liunean Trausactions, vol. xiii., Dr. Hamilton has queried whether it may not be his E. pubescens, which appears from the description to have much affinity with Wrightea antidysenterica, and by Mr. G. Don this figure is quoted with a query for the latter species as well as for H. Codaga. 48. Trophis aspera of Retz. Roxb. Epicarpurus orientalis. Blume. Quoted erroneously by Linnseus, Willdenow, and Lamarck, for Morns indica, and by the younger Burmau, in his Flora Indica, both for that species, and also for Ceanothus asiaticus. 49. Sterculia Balanghas, Lin. Quoted by Salisbury for his Southwellia Nobilis, i. e. Sterculia nobills of Smith, and for Sterculia rubiginosa, by Ventenat and Smith, but it accords at least equally with S. Balanghas, for which it is more generally referred to. 50. Spondias mangifera of Willd. Smith. S. amara. Lam, S. mangifera Var. D C. Mangifera pinnata of Lin. Sup, As remarked by Dr. Hamilton, it is probable that amara is a misprint, and that amra is the name wbich Lamarck gave to this species, for it is called amra in Hindostan, and is described with the name of Amra taca in the Asiatic Researches. \ 51. Agati grandiflora. DC. Sesbania grandiflora. Persoon. Co- ronilla grand ifiora. Willd. YEschynomene grandiflora. Lin, 52. Morinda citrifolia. Lin. 53. Premna? cornutioides. Hamilton in Lin. Trans, xiii. p. 538. It is misnamed Santalum album in Dennstedt's Schlussel. 54. Indigofera tinctoria. Lin. I. indica. Lam. 55. Tephrosia purpurea. W. fy A. Tephrosia Colonila. Ha- milton. Galega purpurea of Lin. Quoted with a query by Lamarck for a variety Galega tinctoria, and Dennstedt considered it to be the Indigofera Anil of Linnaeus. 56. Grewia Microcos. Lin. Microcos paniculata. Lin. Quoted in the Species Plant, for Microcos paniculata, and in the Syst. Nat. Linnseus has removed the species to Grewia. 57. Cinnamomum Zeylanicum Var. N, JEsen. C. Cassia. Hort. Brit. Laurus Cassia. Lin. Roxburgh has quoted this figure for his Laurus Cassia, which Von Esenbeck con- siders to be different from the Linnean species, and the former is referred to by Esenbeck, together with Cinnamomum Cassia of Dons Prodromus, for hit Cinnamomum albiflorum. HOftTUS MALABARICUS. VOL. II. Tab. 1. Pandanus fascicularis. Lam. Most authors have followed Willdenow in quoting this figure jointly with t. 2, 3, 4, and 5, for Pandanus odoratissimus, and it is quoted separately by Burman for his Bromelia sylvestris, \vliich is the same species; but, as re- marked by Dr. Hamilton, Rhccde's name for this plaut, equally with tab. 6, is ' Kaidii taddi,' and it is P. fascicularis , with the Drupae less advanced towards maturity. 20 3. (Pandanus odoratissimus. Lin. Sup. Athrodactylis spinosa. 4. i Forster. 5j Both Linnaeus and Forster have quoted tab. 1 to 8 for this species. 6. Pandanus fascicularis. Lam. 7. t Pandanus unipapillatus. Denn. Dr. Hamilton says that this is evidently a distinct species of Pandanus not yet noticed by modern authors, aud Dennstedt's knowledge of it is probably wholly derived from the Hortus Malabaricus. 8. Pandanus furcatus. Roxb. P. spinufructus. Denn. 9. Winterlia aromatica. Denn. This figure has been generally misquoted instead of t. 10, for Unona Narum, and it is called ' Winter Ka aromatica mihi,' by Deunstedt, but may probably be an undc.scribed species of Limouia. 10. U varia Narum. W.fyA. Unona Narum. Dunal. Burman, Willdenow, Sir J. E. Smith, and most other authors, have followed Linnaeus in quoting this figure erroneously for Uvaria Zeylanica. 11. Vitex trifolia. Lin. 12. Vitex negundo. Lin. V. trifolia. Var. Lam. 13. Ixora coccinea. Lin. I. grandiflora. Sot. Reg. Pavetta coccinea. Blume. Quoted by De Candolle for the J. Bandhuca of Roxburgh, which is very nearly allied to I. coccinea, and in the color of the flower, as described by Rheede, this plant differs somewhat from either of these. /. coccinea of the Botanical Magazine, 1. 169, is a different species. 6 HORT. MAL,-~ VOL. II. Tab. 14. Ixora alba. Lin. I. fulgens. Var? DC. Sir J. E. Smith (in Rees's Cyc.) has shewn that Linnaeus derived all his know- ledge of /. alba from Rheede's Description, and it is most probably a pale variety either of 1. fulgens, or some other red flowered species. — I. alba of Roxburgh (see Dot. Reg. t. 100), is a different plant, and Roxburgh with a mark of doubt has quoted this figure for /. barbata; by Roemer and Schultes it is quoted both for I. alba and for I. incarnata of Roxburgh, but there is no species with this name in the Flora Indica ; by Lamarck for his I. lanceolata, which answers to the I. fulgens of Roxburgh, and by Wight and Arnott with a query for a variety of Roxburgh's /. lanceolaria. 15. Memecylon grande of Retz. Smith. M. amplexicaule. W.Sj-A. 16. Briedelia scandens. Roxb. Erroneously quoted by Linnaeus and Willdenow for Clutia retusa, and by La- marck for his C. squamata, whieh he suspects may be the Linnean C. retusa. B. scandens in the Plants of Coromandel is figured with the name of Cluytia scandens, and this plate in the late General Hardwick's Copy is marked * Andrachne Donky-boora of Roxburgh,' which latter is its Telinga name. 17. Hibiscus Rosa Sinensis. Lin. flore pleno. Rheede has figured the flowers in their more natural state in vol. vi. t. 43. 18. Mussaenda Belilla. Hamilton. Quoted for M.frondosa, by Linnaeus and most other authors, and by Smith for the M. glabra of Vahl ; the latter, however, belongs rather to the M. Dovinia of Hamilton, and Wight and Arnott have queried whether either of these is more than a variety of M . frondosa. 19. Hugonia Mystax. Lin. 20. Justicia Ecbolium. Lin. Though generally quoted for J. Ecbolium, it does not well answer to the Linnean character. 21. Justicia Betonica. Lin. 22. Guilandina Bonduc of Lin. W. fy A. G. Bonducella. Lin. Wight and Arnott have quoted this figure for the Linnean G. Bonduc, and have ascertained that G. Bonducella is the same species. 23. Stylocoryne Webera. W. fy A. Cupia corymbosa. DC. Webera corymbosa. Willd. Rondeletia asiatica. Lin. See the note on vol. iv. t. 28. 24. Vernonia anthelmintica. Willd. Serratula anthelmintica. Roxb. Ascaricida anthelmintica. Hort. Brit. Conyza anthelmintica. Lin. 25. Clerodendrum villosum. Blume. Misquoted by Linnaeus and Willdenow for C. infortunatum, by Roxburgh for Volkameria inforlunata, and for C. viscosum by Ventenat, and in the Hortus Kewensis aud Botanical Magazine (t. 1805), and from these species C. villosum differs in having the leaves very entire. HORT. MAL. — VOL. II. Tab. 26. Gilibertia Nalagu. DC. Gastonia Nalagu. Lam. This figure is quoted by Willdenow for Aralia Chinensis ; for Leea crispa, by Roxburgh ; for Gastonia Nalagu, by Lamarck ; for Leea sambucina and Gilibertia Nalagu, by DeCandblle; for Aralia Chinensis, Leea sambucina, and again as a Gastonia, in Rees's Cyclopaedia; for Leea Staphylea of Roxburgh, by Wight and Arnott ; and Dr. Hamilton suspected that it might be Leea eequata of Linnseus's Mantissa ! 27. Phyllanthus scandens of Roxb. Herb. In Gen. Hardwick's Copy of the Hortus Malabaricus, this plate is marked ' Phyllanthus scandens of Roxburgh,' and it answers by far better to a speci- men which is so* named in Roxburgh's Herbarium, than to the P. rhamnoides either of Retzius or Willdenow, for the latter of which it is arranged by Dennstedt. — Rheede has figured two plants, vol. ii. t. 27, and x. t. 27, with the name of Niruri, and it is rather singular that the P.Niruri of Lin. should not be either of these, but x. t. 15, which is the Kirganeli, and again that the P. Kirganelia of Willdenow should be a plant unknown to Rheede. — See my note on x. 27. 28. Daltura alba. N. JEsen. in Lin. Trans, xvii. p. 73. Other authors have followed Linnaeus in quoting this figure for D. Metel, with which it has been generally confounded, and Von Esenbeck has shewn good cause for considering it to be distinct from the D, metel which grows on the coasts of Africa. 29. Datura dubia. Persoon. In the Copy of the Hortus Malabaricus at the Linnean Society, this plate is marked D. glabra, but though the capsule is quite unarmed in the figure, it may be queried from Rheede's Description whether this of itself can be relied on for a specific character, and Poiret appears to have met with a variety * capsulis muticis' of D. fastuosa. — Burman in his Index has erroneously re- ferred to tab. 28, 29, and 30, for D. Metel, and by DeCandolle and some other authors, tab. 29 is accidentally quoted instead of tab. 19 for Huyonia Mystax. 30. Datura dubia of Persoon. Var. flore triplici. Dr. Hamilton suspected that this may be the Linnaeus D.fastuosa, but it has not been otherwise referred to for that species, and the unarmed capsule and simple leaves denote its affinity with D. dubia. 31. Calotropis gigantea. Hort. Kew. Asclepias gigantea. Lin. Asclepias gigantea. Var. Lam. The Bel Ericu, which Rheede has described separately, is a variety with white flowers. 32. Ricinus communis of Lin. Burman. The Pandi Avanacu, of which Rheede has annexed a description, is the R. viridis of Willdenow. 33. CrotonTiglium. Lin. 34. Tragia Chamselea. Lin. Cnemidostachys Chamaelea. Hort . Brit. Euphorbia bifurca. Ham. MS. ? 35. Solanum ferox of Lin. Burman. S. lasiocarpum. Dunal. S. hirsutum. Roxb. This figure has been quoted by Burman and Esenbeck for the Linnean S. ferox, and the plate is so marked in Sir W. Jones's Copy at the Athenaeum, 8 HORT. MAL, — VOL. II. Tab. 36. Solanumindicum of Lin. Burman. S. violaceum. Jacquin. Linnaeus, under the name of S. indicum, has confounded two species, of which one is an East and the other a West Indian plant. The former, which is the S. indicum of Roxburgh and Esenbeck, is Jacquin's S. violaceum, and Dunal has retained the Linneau name for the latter. Dennstedt erroneously consi- dered this plant of Rheede's to be the Linnean S. sanctum. 37. Solanum Melongena Var. N. Esen. Quoted by Lamarck for his S. undatum, which most probably is another variety of S. Melongena. 38. Hibiscus Abelmoschus. Lin. Abelmoschus moschatus. W.fyA. 39. Tragia involucrata. Lin. Though quoted by Linnaeus, Willdenow, Roxburgh, and others for T. involucrata, Dr. Hamilton thought it more likely to be the T. hispida of Willd., and the latter is considered by Roxburgh to be probably nothing more than a variety of the former. — The leaves are more ovate than cordate, and under the head of Urtica pilulifera in Recs's Cyclopaedia, Sir J. E. Smith expressly says that this iigure is T. involucrala. 40. Boehmeria interrupta. Willd. Urtica interrupta. Lin. 41. Urtica heterophylla. Vahl. 42. Euphorbia Antiquorum. Lin. 43. Euphorbia Nivulia. Hamilton. E. nereifolia. Roxb. For E. nereifolia Linnaeus has quoted Rumphius, iv. t. 40, together with the pre- sent figure of Rhccdc's and the former is the E. ligularia, and the latter the E. nereifolia of Roxburgh. Both these species have been described by different authors for E. nereifolia, and, to prevent confusion, Dr. Hamilton has changed the uame. 44. Euphorbia Tirucalli. Lin. 45. Barleria longifolia of Lin. Lam. Ruellia longifolia. Roxb. In Esenbeck's New Arrangement of the Acanthaceae, B. longifolia is removed to a separate genus, with the name of Asteracantha. 46. Hygrophila obovata. Hamilton. Ruellia obovata. Roxb. The younger Linnaeus has described his Ruellia difformis ' foliis linearibus,' and queried, without any sufficient grounds, whether this plant of Rheede's may not be a variety. 47. Barleria bispinosa of Vahl. N.Esen. B. cristataVar. Lam. B. buxifolia. Roxb. (not Lin.) B. obovata. Hamilton. Quoted by Linnaeus and most other authors for E. buxifolia; but under that name Linnaeus has obviously confounded this plant with an American Bar- leria, and the name in Dr. Hamilton's opinion more probably belongs to the latter. 48. Dilivaria Ilicifolia of Juss, Per soon. Acanthus Ilicifolius. Lin. HORT. MAL.— VOL. II. 9 Tab. 49. Ludwigia diffusa. Hamilton. Jussiaea caryophyllaea. Lam. Quoted in the Species Plantarum both for Ludwigia perennis and for Jussitea suffruticosa; but, in the Mantissa, Linnaeus has cancelled the reference to the former, and it is a very uncertain species. Dr. Hamilton's definition of his L. diffusa is not happily expressed ' capsulis subpedunculatis folio dimidio brevioribus ;' and, from a comparison of authentic specimens, I much doubt whether it is more at most than a variety of Roxburgh's L.parviflora. By Sir J. E. Smith this figure is erroneously quoted for the American Jussicca erecta. 30. Jussiaea suffruticosa of Lin. Surman. J. villosa. Lam. J. ex- altata. Roxb> As is above remarked, the Carambu, t. 49, is quoted in the Sp. Plant, both for Ludwigia perennis and for J. suffruticosa, and by his erroneous reference to Rumphius for the latter species in the Syst. Nat., Linnaeus has encreased the confusion. The younger Burman, in the Flora Indica, has referred to this, tab. 50, as a variety of/, suffruticosa, and in his Father's Index it was subse- quently quoted for the alpha of that species, in which arrangement he has been followed by Sir J. E. Smith and Dr. Hamilton. 51. Jussiaea repens. Lin. 52. Cassia Sophera. Lin. Senna Sophera. Roxb. Chamaefis- tula Sophera. G. Don. 53. Cassia Tora of Lin. Var. W.fyA. C.Tagera. Lam. fy DC. (not Lin.) Linnaeus, with a query, has quoted this figure, and used Rheede's nzmc(Taycra) for a very different species of Cassia, and the Linnean name has therefore been changed from C. Tagera to C. ciliaris. Of Lamarck's C. Tagera and of C.ciliaris, all our knowledge appears to have been derived in the former case from Rheede, and in the other from a short description in the Species Plan- tarum ; and Drs. Wight and Arnott, from an examination of the specimen of C. Tagera, in the Linnean Herbaricum, suspect that the latter may be the C. tenella of De Candolle.— -See Prodromus's Floras Peninsulae Indiae Orientalis, p. 291. 54. ") Tabernaemontana coronaria. Roxb. T. divaricata. R. 8f S. 55. > Nerium coronarium. Willd, Nyctanthes acuminata. Bur- } man. It has been ascertained by Mr. Brown that this is the Linnean N. divaricatum, and ita mark for a biennial in the Species Plantarum must therefore be erro- neous. In Don's Dictionary, this t. 54 is quoted both for T, coronaria and for Wrightla Rothii. 5G. Capsicum frutescens of Lin. R. 8f S. Misquoted by Burman for C. annuum, and I am ignorant of Dcnnstedt's mean- ing in calling it C. Sinense of Linnaeus. This is certainly C. frutescens of the Hortus Cliftbrtianus, p. 60, but Linnaeus subsequently omitted the reference to Rheede in the Species Plantarum, which may have thrown some doubt on his intentions. B Tab, HORTUS MALABARICUS. VOL. III. Corypha umbraculifera, Lin. Cycas sphaerica of Roxb. Most authors have followed Linnaeus in quoting these figures jointly with Rumphius, i. t. 22 and 23, for Cycas circularis, but Roxburgh has arranged them separately, and they appear to me to be distinct. •Phoenix sylvestris. Roxb. Elate sylvestris. Lin. Dr. Hamilton suspects that this is nothing more than the Linncan Phoenix dac- tylifera in a wild uncultivated state, but it is arranged as a separate species in the Flora Indica. 26 "^ 27* I Artocarpus integrifolius of Lin. Supt. Willd. Artocarpus 28.) Jaca.Var. Lam. Sitodium cauliflorum. Gart. Artocarpus Jaca is Lamarck's name for this species, and he considered Rum- phius, i. t, 31, to be the Linnean A.integrifolius, and Rheede's plant to be a variety. HORT. MAL.—VOL. III. 11 Tab. 29. Annona squamosa. Lin. 30, 31, 30 7 ' > Annona rcticulata. Lin. A.reticulata, in the Species PI an tar urn, is described to be a native of America, and a reference to Rheede has been added in the Systema Naturae. I have only seen a Jamaica plant, which differed considerably from these figures, but they have been quoted by almost every author for A.reticulata, and the dif- ference may perhaps be attributed to the growth in a different climate. 32. Artocarpus hirsuta. Lam. A. pubescens. Willd. 33. Nauclea Cadamba. Roxb. N. citrifolia. Poiret. Quoted by Linnaeus, Gocrtncr, and most other authors, for N. orientalis, with which this species appears to have been formerly confounded ; and in the Hortus Britannicus it is quoted both for N. orientalis and for N. Cadamba. It is considered by Wight and Arnott to be N. purpurea, rather than N. Ca- damba of Roxburgh ; but Rheede has described the flower to be yellow. 34. Psidium pyriferum. Lin. Dr. Hamilton says that tab. 34 and 35 belong to the same species, and I have seen West India plants of P. pyriferum or pomiferum, with the fruit of an inter- mediate shape. 35. Psidium pomiferum. Lin. 36. Careya arborea. Roxb. Quoted by Dennstedt for the Psidium montanum of Swartz. 37. AegleMarmelosofCorrea. Roxb. Crataeva Marmelos. Lin. OO 'J *> Dillenia indica. Lin. D.integra of Thunberg. '>t'» y Most authors have followed Thunberg, who has quoted these figures (theSyalita of Rheede) together with D. indica of Linnaeus for his D. spedosa, but Rheede has represented the leaves to be nearly entire, and this plant has altogether more affinity with the D. integra of Thunberg. Linnaeus first constituted the species in the Hortus Cliffortianus, where there is no mention of any Ser- ratures, and all his references are either directly to, or belong to, the Syalita; but to these Synonyms, in the Species Plantarum, he has added the Songium of Rumphius, which much resembles the D. spedosa, and this may have led to the long continuance of the error in considering the D. indica and D. spedosa to be the same. The Songium is, however, quoted for a separate species, with the name of D. elKptica, by Thunberg. There is no specimen of D. indica in the Linnean Herbarium, and all the specimens that I have seen of D. spedosa accord with Roxburgh's Description in having the leaves 'most regularly sharp-serrate.' 40. SonneratiaacidaofLin. Sup. Willd. Rhizophora caseolaris. Lin. Sp. Plant. 41. Diospyros Embryopteris. Persoon. D. glutinosa. Roxb. Garcinia malabarica. Desrousseux. It is D. glutinosa of the Flora Indica; but Roxburgh, in his Plants of Coro- mandel, has described it with the name of Embryopteris glutinifera, and in Don's Dictionary the species is erroneously called E, yelatinifera. The leaves, 12 HORT. MAL.—VOL. III. as represented in this figure, are considerably broader and more obtuse than in any specimen that I have met with, but Dr. Hamilton has remarked that they vary much in shape. Tab. 42. Cratseva Nurvala. Hamilton in Lin. Trans, xv. p. 142. This figure is misquoted by Linnaeus for C. Tapia, and by Willdenow for C. re- ligiosa. It is also quoted by Roxburgh for his Capparis trifoliata ( which is synonymous with Cratteva religiosa), but Dr. Hamilton has ascertained that it is a distinct species. 44* > Averrhoa Carambola. Lin. 46* V Averrhoa Bilimbi. Lin. 48*> Phyllanthus longifolius. Roxb. Averrhoa acida. Lin. Quoted by Linnaeus for A. acida, and his Cicca disticha, as well as Phyllanthus longifolius of Jacquin and Roxburgh (not of Lamarck), is the same species. Dr. Hamilton thought that Rheede's Plant is the P. Cheramela rather than the P. longifolius of Roxburgh, but there can be no doubt that P . Cheramela of the Hortus Bengalensis is P. longifolius of the Flora Indica. S0" I Eriodendron anfractuosum. DC. Bombax pentandrum. r j* 4 Lin. Gossampinus alba. Hamilton, 52. Bombax malabaricum. DC. B.heptaphyllum. Roxb. (no Lin.) Gossampinus rubra. Hamilton. Misquoted by Linnaeus for JB. Ceiba, and by Burman and Willdenow for the Linnean B.heptaphyllum; both of which in all probability are exclusively American plants. 53. Mesua ferrea. Lin. M . speciosa. D C. De Candolle has followed Burman in arranging this plant of Rheede's and of the Herb. Amb. vii. t. 2, as separate species, and he has, as I think, erroneously retained the Linnean name for the latter. Sir W. Jones has used Nagacesara instead of Mesua for the generic name, and in the Asiatic Researches says, " Surely, the genuine appellation of an Indian plant should be substituted for the corrupted name of a Syrian Physician, who could never have seen it ; and if any trivial name was necessary to distinguish a single species, a more ab- surd one than Iron could net possibly have been selected for a flower with petals like silver and anthers like gold." 54. Anacardium occidentale, Var. indicum. D C. Quoted by Linnseus for A. occidentale, but there is a considerable difference be- tween the East and West India Nuts, and it is probably a distinct species, 55. Ficusnitida. Willd. 56. Ficus undulata ? Hamilton in Lin. Trans, xv. p. 133. Quoted with a query by Willdenow and Foiret for F. terebrata, by Lamarck for his F. pyrifolia, and by Martyn for F. pertusa, and I have not noticed any re- feronce to this uncertain figure without a mark of doubt. HORT. &AL.— VOL. III. 13 Tab, 57. Ficus cotoneaefolia. Vahl. Quoted by Linnaeus, Burman, Lamarck, and Sir James Smith, for F. indica; by Willdeuow and Persoon, and with a mark of doubt by Dr. Hamilton, for F. citrifotia ; and by Persoon and Rcemer and Schultes for the F. cotoneafolia of Yahl. In Sir W. Jones's copy at the Athenaeum this plate is marked ' F. indica citrifolia.' 58. Ficus excelsa. Vahl. 59. Ficus septica. Burman. CO. Ficus asperrima. Roxb. Quoted by Burman and Dennstedt for F. Ampelos; but Sir J. E. Smith, in de- scribing that species, says of this figure, that ' the leaves are too small, and the fruit unlike our specimen,' and he then suggests] that it may be F. potiloria of Loureiro, but Loureiro has described the fruit of his species to be in spikes. 61. Ficus Perim teregam. Burman. F. hispida. Blume(notLin.) All modern authors, except Blume, have quoted this figure with a mark of doubt; some for F.oppositifolia, some for F. symphitifolia, and others for F. hispida. By Blume it is quoted for the latter, and it may possibly be the tree which he met with, but the Linnean F. hispida, from the description in the Supplementum Plantarum, must be quite different. In Burman's Index the Caprificus viridis of Rumphius, which he considered to be the same as this plant of jRheede's, is marked F. Perim teregam, with the addition of HML (Hort. Mai. Lin.?), and it may perhaps be inferred, that he was aware of Linnaeus's intention to describe the species with that name. It, however, appears to be uncertain whether the Perim teregam of Rheede and the Capri- feus viridis of Rumphius are the same species, though the identity is strongly asserted by Burman, and Blume has quoted the latter for his F. Ribes.—See Rumphius, vol. iii. p. 153. 62. Ficus heterophylla of Lin. Sup. Lam. It is quoted by Willdenow for F. aquatica, and by Vahl and Sir J. E. Smith for F. rufescens, both of which are probably synonymous with F. heterophylla, and for the latter by Lamarck, Persoon, and Roxburgh. In Gen. Hard- wicke's copy this plate is marked 'F. humilis, Banksii MSS.— F. heterophylla. Kcenig.' 63. Ficus amplissima. Smith. F. Tsjela. Roxb. This, according to Burman, Willdenow, Vahl, and the Hort. Kew., is the Linnean F. indica, but Linnaeus has only quoted Rheede's figure jointly with some American Fici for a variety of that species. I 64. Ficus infectoria. Willd. F. venosa. Smith. F. Tsjakcla. Burman. F. venosa of Willdenow, for which Dennstedt has quoted this figure, is a different species. HORTUS MALABARICUS, VOL. IV. ' £ Mangifera indica. Lin. . o "i / > Terminalia Catappa. Lin. 5. Myristica dactyloides. Gcert. M. malabarica. Lam. Willdenow considered this to be bis Af. tomentosa; but Sir J. E. Smith (in Rees's Cyc.) has remarked, that, unless Rheedc's figure is inaccurate, it must be a distinct species. Rheede has obviously described the branch of a female plant; and may not the panicle which he has figured separately belong to the male? 6. Barringtonia racemosa. Roxb. Stravadium racemosum. Juss. Stravadia alba. Persoon. Eugenia racemosa. Lin. Misquoted by Gsertner for Barringtonia speciosa. 7. Barringtonia aeutangula. Gcert. Stravadium acutangulum. Juss. Stravadia rubra. Persoon. Stravadium rubrum. D C. Eugenia aeutangula. Lin. 8. Quoted by Linnaeus, in the Flora Zeylanica, for the Maharatombola, which is a species taken from Burman's Thesaurus, and not noticed in his other works. Dr. Hamilton has suggested that it may belong to the genus Scopolia of Forster, but it is quoted with a query by Dennstedt for Eugenia paniculata of Lamark (i.e. Sygygium paniculatum of De Candolle); and Professor Don thinks, though the description may do for Scopolia, that the figure more resembles some Myrtaceous plant. 0. Holigarna longifolia. Roxb. Mangifera? racemosa. Lam. Hadestaphylum causticum. Denn. The 'Bibo,' which Rheede, at p. 20, has described as a variety, and which Dr.Hamilton has quoted, instead of this figure for H. longifolia, was consi- dered by Roxburgh to be Semecarpus Anacardium. 10. Terminalia Belerica. Roxb. Myrobalanus Bellerica. Gart* Dr. Hamilton suspected that this may be a species distinct from T. Belerica, for which he has proposed the name of T. Taria ( Tania ?), but I cannot discover any grounds for thinking so. By Dennstedt it is erroneously quoted for the Gmelina parviflora of Roxburgh. HORT. MAL. — VOL. IV. 15 Tab. 11. Rumphia Amboinensis. Lin. R. Tilisefolia. Poiret. Although the description in the Genera Plantarum does not well accord with Rheede's description and figure, it appears to me that the genus Rumphia has been wholly derived from them, and that all the subsequent descriptions of R. Amboinensis and R. Tllicefolia, as well as the figure in Lamarck's Illus- trations, have been taken from the same source, nor can I find a specimen under either name in the Linuean or any other Herbarium. 12. Atalantia monophylla of DC. W. fy A. Limonia mono- phylla. Roxb. This figure may probably have been intended for A . monophylla f but, particularly in the fruit, it is far from accurate. 13. Randia dumetorum of W. &A. Gardenia dumetorum. Kwnig's MS. It is quoted in Kceing's MS. for Gardenia dumetorum, and there are specimens of Randia or Posoqueria dumetorum at the Linnean Society, which answer to this figure. Wight and Arnott say that the whole habit of the plant is extremely variable, according as it grows in a poor or rich soil, and Gardenia spinosa of Lin. Sup. is most probably the same species. In Burman's Index it is erro- neously called Punica granatum, and by Dennstedt it is called * Limonia toru- losay mihif but it cannot belong to the Hesperidese. 14. Limonia acidissima. Lin. L. crenulata. Roxb. Linnaeus has occasioned some confusion by quoting the Anisifotium of Rum- phius jointly with this figure for his L. acidissima, and their resemblance to each other is chiefly confined to the foliage. The former is Feronia elephant um of Correa. 15. Valeria indica. Lin. Elaeocarpus copalliferus. Willd. 16. Milnea edulis of Roxb. ? Nyalelia racemosa. Denn. In some respects it answers better to M. montana of Dr. Jack in Lin. Trans. • xiv. p. 117, but that species is described to be digynous. 17. Alangium decapetalum. Lam. Roxburgh describes the flower to be six or seven petalled, and strongly suspects that this is only a variety of A. hexapetalum. 18. Briedelia horrida. Hcydia horrida. Denn. I have the authority of Professor Don for considering this to be a Briedelia, and it is most probably a species allied to the B. spinosa of Roxburgh, which no other author besides Rlieede has met with. 19. Sapindus trifoliatus. Lin. S. laurifolius. Vahl. * > Lagcrstrocmia Reginae. Roxb. Adambea glabra, Lam. 22 Lagerstroemia hirsuta. Willd. Adambea hirsula. Lam. It is remarked by Wight and Arnott, that this plant ' has hitherto been only seen by Rheede, and known by his figure and description.' 23. XanthophyllumflavescensofRoxb. Blume. Kaulfussia ge- miniflora. Dcnn. 20 21 16 HORT. MAL.— VOL. IV. Tab. 24. Elseocarpus oblongus. Cart. E. Perim-kara. DC. Quoted by Linnaeus, Burman, Willdenow, and Roxburgh for E. serralus, and it is at least more nearly allied to the Ganitrum oblongum of Rumphius, which is the E. oblongus of Gsertner. In Rumphius's figure the leaves are, however, entire, though he has described them to be ' obscure et ample dentata/ and De Candolle may have been misled by the figure to describe E. oblongus 'foliis integerrimis,' and to arrange this plant of Rheede's as a separate species. 25. Mimusops Kauki of Lin. Roxb. M. manilkara.C?. Don. For M, KauJci Linnaeus has only quoted the Herb. Amb. vol. iii. t. 8; and the flowers in Rumphius's plate appear to be mere copies from this figure of Rheede's. I take Roxburgh's M. Kauki, with somewhat pointed leaves, to be the Linnean species, sndAchras dissecta of the Supplement, for which Will- denow has quoted this figure, to be Roxburgh's M. hexandra, with the leaves emarginate, and the large branch here figured belongs to the former, while it is not improbable that the flowers which Rheede has separately added may be those of If. hexandra. Sir W. J. Hooker (Bot. Mag. t. 3157) has quoted this figure for M. dissecta (M. hexandra ?), and has queried whether it is more than a variety of M, Kauki. In like manner this figure has been quoted by Lamarck for M. obtuslfolia, and by Gmelin for Achras Balata(i. e. M. Batata) t and it appears to me to be very doubtful whether they together constitute more than one, or at most two, species. Mr. G. Don has, however, arranged all the five separate, and to these he has added Rheede's plant as a sixth species, with the name of M. Manilkara. 26. Alangium hexapatalum. Lam. 27. Tectona grandis. Lin. Sup. Tectona Theka. Loureiro. Theka grandis. Lam. 28. Wendlandia Notoniana of Wallich ? Dr. Hamilton has queried whether this figure should not be referred to instead of vol. ii. t. 23, for the Webera corymbosa of Willdenow; but, as suggested to me by Professor Don, it is much more nearly allied to the Cttpia thyrsoidea of De Candolle. Without any sufficient grounds, it is quoted with a mark of doubt by Dennstedt for the Ardisia humilis of Vahl, and Poiret considered it to be a species of Psychotria, 29. Clerodendrum serratum. Hamilton. Volkameria serrata of Lin. Mant. Roxburgh has not quoted Rheede for this species ; but to support Dr. Ha- milton's opinion, I find in the late Gen. Hardwicke's copy that this plate is marked ' Volkameria serrata Lin/ 30. Benteka Rheedii. Lam. fyRfyS. Kasailo racemosa. Denn. All our knowledge of this plant appears to have been derived from this figure and description of Rheede's. 31. Cynometra ramiftora. Lin. In the shape of the leaves this plant differs much from the Cynomorium sylveslre of Rumphius, but all authors have takenMt to be the same species. 32. Odina Woodier of Roxb. Rhus Odina. Hamilton. Ha- berlia grandis. JDenn. HORT. MAL. — VOL. IV. 17 Tab. 33. Garuga pinnata. Roxb. Kunthia Cochinensis. Dcnn. 34. Schinus Saheria? Hamilton. Some uncertainty must attend this plant, for Rheede has not figured or de- scribed either the flower or the fruit, and what might be mistaken for the latter is the work of an insect. Dennstedt calls it ' Haberlia grandis, mil Gallauswuchsen' (see the foregoing tab. 32), but the leaves answer better to a variety of Schinus Saheria, which Dr. Hamilton has mentioned * Serraturis magnis remotis incisa.' See Lin. Trans, xvii. p. 193. 35. Artocarpus Ponga. Denn. Dr. Hamilton concurs with Poiret in suspecting that this is a species of Brous- sonetia, at present unknown ; and I apprehend that all Dunnstedt's know- ledge of the plant is derived from Rheede. 36. Vitex leucoxylon of Lin. Sup. Roxb. Misquoted by Linnaeus, Burman, and Willdenow, and in the Hortus Britannicus, for Sterculiafcetida. 37. Cordia officinalis. Lam. C. Myxa. Roxb. (not Lin.) C. Myxa Var. Poiret. Sebestena officinalis. Gcert. Linnaeus has quoted this figure for C. Myxa, but it does not answer the charac- ter ' calycibus decemstriatis,' and the name more properly belongs to a native of Egypt. Of the East Indian plant Roxburgh says that the calyx is 'not in the least striated.' 38. Calophyllum Inophyllum. Lin. 39. Calophyllum spurium. D C. C. apetalum. Willd. in Berl. Mag. Linnaeus confounded this species with an American plant of Jacquin's, and both Lamarck and Willdenow (in his Edit, of the Sp. Plant.) have followed him in quoting this figure for C. Calaba, but Willdenow afterwards corrected the error in the Berlin Magazine. It may probably be the C. Calaboides of Don's Dictionary, but he has not quoted this figure. 40. Celtis orientalis. Lin. C. orientalis Var. Hamilton. Much confusion attends the references to this figure, from its having been quoted by Burman both for Celtis orientalis and Rhamnus Napeca, and by Linnaeus for the former in the Species Plantarum, and for Muntingia Calabura in the Systema Naturae. Though Martyn has quoted this figure, his C. orien- talis is another species, and is the C. Tournefortii of Lamarck. 41. Zizyphus Jujuba. Gcert. Rhamnus Jujuba. Lin. Mr. Loudon is of opinion that this plant will thrive in the open air in the wanner parts of the South of England (see Arboretum et Fruticetum Britannic urn. vol. ii. p. 527); but the plant which Miller cultivated under the name of R. Jujuba, appears from his description to have been a different species. 42. Melastoma malabarica. Lin. The Ben Kadali, described by Rheede on the following page, is said by Wight and Arnott to be Osbeckia Wight iana of Bentham. Dennstedt erroneously considered t. 42 to be M.aspera, and t 43 to be M. malabarica. C 18 HORT. MAL.— VOL. IV. Tab. 43. Osbeckia cupularis ? W. fy A. Melastoma cyanoides. Smith in Rees's Cyc. This figure is quoted in the Species Plantarum, and by Gaertner, Willdenow, and Blume, for M. aspera; but Burman, in the Flora Indica, has quoted t. 42 both for that species and for M. malabarica, and has referred to the present figure for the Linnean M. Tiirta. The elder Burman, in his Index, says that t. 43 is M. Scabra, and, by an inaccuracy in the references, has left in un- certainty whether by his name he intended the M. scabrosa or M. aspera of Linnaeus. To add to the confusion De Candolle has referred to this figure both for M. aspera and for M. cyanoides ; and, on the other hand, in the En- cyclopaedia Methodique, t. 42 and 43 are jointly quoted for M. malabarica. 44. Osbeckia virgata ? W.fyA. Melastoma montana. Denn. In the late General Hardwick's copy this plate is marked Melasloma nemorum of Kcenig, and Rheede says that it altogether resembles t. 42, ' nisi quod foliis, floribus, fructibusque sit minoribus/ 45. Avicennia Oepata. Hamilton in Lin. Trans. A. tomentosa. Roxb. (notWilld.) Under the synonymous names of Bontia germinans, Avicennia germinans, or A. tomenlosa, Linnaeus and several other authors have described a native of the West Indies, with a reference to this figure, and the Malabar plant, though nearly allied, is most probably a separate species. 46. Achras retusa. Denn. No author besides Dennstedt has noticed this figure, which cannot belong to Achras, and Professor Don thinks that it is more allied to the Calophylliese. ' > Guettarda speciosa of Lin. Smith. 47. 48. Quoted for Nyctanthes hirsuta by Linnaeus, and for Jasmimum hirsutum by Will- denow, and Poiret thought that it may be Guettarde scabra (i. e. Mathiola scabra. Lin.), which has only been found in America. 49. Casearia ovata. Willd. C. Anavinga. Persoon. Anavinga ovata. Lam. 50. ChristmanniaCourondi. Denn. \ I have not met with any other reference to this figure, and Professor Don sus- pects that it may have been intended for the Johnia Coromandeliana of Rox- burgh j but among other differences the flowers are described ' numerosis staminulis' by Rheede. 51. Sapium indicum. Roxb. I know not the meaning, but in General Hardwick's copy this plate is marked ' Aniidesrna nucifera. L/ 5*2. Azadirachta Indica. W. Sf A. Melia Azadirachta. Lin. 53. Bergera Koenigii of Lin. Mant. W. fy A. Nimbo melioides. Denn. Dr. Hamilton has shewn good grounds for believing that this figure, though it has not been referred to, may be the JB. Koenigii, and it at least answers far better to the Linnean description than Rumphius's, i. t. 53, f. 1, which has been quoted by Willdenow, or than the plant which, in the Botanical Cabinet, HORT. MAL. — VOL. IV. 19 t. 1019, has been figured for that species. Roxburgh's B. Koenigii, in the Plants of Coromandel, is also different, and it is not quoted in the Flora Indica. In the latter work it is said in Bengal to be a small tree, whereas Rheede mentions its lofty growth, and it may not improbably attain to a larger size in the climate of Malabar. Tab. 54. Olea dioica of Roxb. Hamilton. Picricarya oppositifolia. Denn. 55. Physalis flexuosa. Lin. Quoted by Linnaeus, Willdenow, Martyn, Roemer and Schultes, Von Esenbeck, and Roxburgh, and in the Hortus Kewensis and Hortus Britaunicus, for P. flexuosa; but Dr. Hamilton (in Lin. Trans, xvii. p. 209) has questioned whether it is not an entirely different plant 56. Stilago Bunias of Lin. Mant. Willd. Antidesma Alexiteria. 9 Lin. Sp. Plant. Some authors have followed the Species Plantarum in quoting this figure for Antidesma Alexiteria ; by others it is referred to for Stilago Bunias ; and by some for both ; and it has been ascertained by Roxburgh and Sir J. E. Smith that they are the same species. In being triandrous, it answers best to the Linnean character of Stilago, and in its subcylindrical berries to that ,of Antisdesma. 57. Hedyotis Lawsoniae. W. 8f A. Wendlandia? Lawsonia. D C. Lawsonia purpurea. Lam. Poiret has suggested that it should be removed to Petesia ; but from this genus, equally with Lawsonia and Wendlandia, it differs in being monopetalous. 58. Gardenia latifolia of Roxburgh. Bertuchia speciosa. Denn. I have not met with any reference to this figure besides Dennstedt's ; but, by comparing it with Roxburgh's figure and with authentic specimens at the Linnean Society, it appeared to my friend Mr. Don, as well as myself, to be the G. latifolia. This plate in General Hard wick's copy is marked 'Gardenia heteroclita Koeniy.' 59. ScaevolaTaccada. Roxb. Scaevola Bela madogam. R.fyp Lobelia Taccada. Gcert. ? Roemeria Lobelia. Denn. Four genera from other authors have received the name of Roemeria, and Dennstedt appears very unnecessarily to have added a fifth. 60. Callicarpa cana of Lin. Mant. ' I have the authority of my friend Robert Brown for the above reference, and the figure answers to a specimen at the Liunean Society, which has been so named by Dr. Wallich. It is quoted with a query by Dennstedt for the Callicarpa macrophylla of Vahl. 61. Sterculia guttata. Roxb. Astrodendruin malabaricum. Denn. HORTUS MALABARICUS VOL. V. Tab. 1. Vitexalata. Roxb. Quoted by Sir J. E. Smith for V. altissimus of the Supplementum Plantarum, and, as he says that the footstalks of that species are sometime winged, it is probably nothing more than a variety, though Roxburgh has placed them separate. Linnaeus has defined V. altissimus ' foliis integerimis ;' and of the leaves of this plant Rheede only says ' nonnumqr.am in ambitu crenata.' It is quoted with a query by Dennstedt for the V.pubescens of Vahl. 2. Vitex latifolia. Lam. 3. Parilia raalabarica. Denn. From Dr. Hamilton's remarks in Lin. Trans, xvii. p. 237, it may be inferred that he considered this to be the female of some dioecious tree allied to Oka dioica, but the fruit is different ; and, as was suggested to me by Pro- fessor Don, it is more likely to be a Premna. I apprehend that the genus Parilia has been wholly founded on Rheede's description. 4. Cyminosma pedunculata. W. fy A. Drs. Wight and Arnott, whose opinions are entitled to great deference, say that no dependance is lo be placed on the shape of the fruit, and that this and table 15 are the same species. It is misquoted by Burman for a variety of his Croton racemosum. 5. Usteria racemosa. Denn. Quoted by Burman for a variety of his Acalypha spicijlora; and as it cannot be an Usteria either of Cavanilles or Willdeoow, I suppose that Dennstedt must have coined a third genus, with the same name from this description of Rheede's. Poiret suspected that it is allied to Ceanothus ; and, on the other hand, Dr. Hamilton considered it to be one of the Caprifoliacese, and to be at the least nearly allied to the genus Schoepfia. Professor Don, however, thinks that what the Doctor considered to be a calyx is nothing more than the involvucre a little exaggerated, and that it may belong to Acalypha. 6. Hosea malabarica. Denn. Dr. Hamilton has suggested that this may be a species of Tetracera j and, on the contrary, Professor Don thinks that it is an Antidesma, but Rheede's description as well as figure differs more from both these genera than can be fairly attributed to accident or inadvertence. 7. Croton castaneifolium. Burman. Schinza inconspicua. Denn. The Linnean C. castaneifolium is quite different, and may probably be the Her- mesia castaneifolia of Humboldt and Bonpland. HORT. MAL. — VOL. V. 2i Tab. 8. Tetracera Rheedii. DC. Calophyllum Akara. Burman. Rohlingia suavolens. Denn. Quoted by Poiret for Tetracera malabaricus of Lamarck (i. e. T. assa of DC.), from which it has been separated by De Candolle. 9. Tetranthera lanuginosa of Wallich. Daiwinia quinqueflora. Denn. Dennstedt has carelessly coined a new genus from this plant, and given it a name which has long been preoccupied for another by Mr. Rudge. It appears to me to be at least very nearly allied to Tetranlhera lanuginosa, i. e. Tetradenia lanuginosa of N. Esenbeck. 10. Pavetta indica. Lin. Ixora Pavetta. Roxb. 11. Dauceria obtusa. Denn. Embelia? Tsjeriam Cottam. A. DC. Ardisia ? Tsjeram Cottam. R Sc S. Antidesma pubescens. Roxb,? Misquoted in the Hortus Kewensis and Hortus Britannicus for the Linnean Antidesma alexiteria, and it somewhat resembles a male plant of that species, but Rheede has figured the fruit. 12. Dauceria acuta. Denn. Embelia? Basaal. A. DC. Ardisia? Basaal. R.fy S. 13. Carallia corymbosa. Arnott. Demidofia nodosa. Denn. Cataliurn nitidum. Ham. MS. I only know Carallia integrifolia by De Candolle's short description, and it may possibly be the same species. 14. Guatteria Korinti. D C. Quoted by Dennstedt with a ? for Uvaria lutea of Willdenow. 15. Cyminosraa pedunculata. Roxb. Laxmannia ankaenda. Smith. Dorrienia malabarica. Denn. There appears to be two species distinguishable by their long and compara- tively short petals, and the name of Ankcenda has been given to the latter by Gaertner and De Candolle, and to the former by Dryander and Smith, See Lin. Trans, vol. ii. p. 232. Roxburgh, without appearing to be at all ac- quainted with the Anlc&nda, has quoted this figure for his C. pedunculata, and De Candolle has added a query to the reference, for which I cannot see any sufficient grounds. The C. Ankeenda of De Candolle is the M. cyminosma of Smith, and though not equally proper, it is preferable, to avoid further confusion, that Gaertner should be followed, and that the name of Ankcenda should be retained for the species with short petals. 16. Guatteria sempervirens. D C. Quoted for Uvaria cerasoides of Roxb. by Poiret, and with a ? for Uvaria ligularis of Lamarck by Dennstedt 17. Uvaria Heyneana. W. fyA. U. paracaroensis. Denn. Guatteria montana. DC. G. malabarica. Dunal. 18. Guatteria acutiflora. Dunal. Uvaria mangattensis. Denn. 19. Memecylon laxiflorum. DC. M. tinctorium Var. W. fyA. Sir J. E. Smith has quoted this figure for M. capitellatum, but it does not answer to the Cornns sylvestris of Burman'* Thesaurus, which Linnaeus has quoted, 22 HORT. MAL. — VOL. V. or to the only Memecylon in the Linnean Herbarium; and as Burman's figure and this specimen also differ, it is probable that Linnaeus may have confounded at least two species under that name. By Lamark, Persoon, and Dennstedt it is misquoted for Eugenia parviflora of Lamarck. Tab. 20. Sygyzium Zeylanicum of D C. W. fy A. S. Bellutta. DC. Calyptranthus malabaricus. Denn. Myrtus quadran- gularis. Ham. MS. All our knowledge of S. Bellutta appears to have been derived from this figure and description of Rheede's. 21. Rottlera tinctoria. Roxb. Mistaken by Dennstedt for the Linnean Exccecaria Agallocha. 22. Dennstedt says that this is the' Croton coccineum of Willdenow, which Roxburgh has suggested may be his Rottlera tinctoria, i. e. tab. 21, and it is very nearly allied to that species. 23. Excaecaria canjoerensis. Denn. Burman has quoted this figure for a variety of Acalypha spiciflora, and it is ob- viously from Rheede that Dennstedt has derived all his knowledge of this plant, which I have Professor Don's authority for considering to be a Croton. 24. Rottlera tinctoria Var. monstrosa. Ham. MS. Dennstedt has no ground for suspecting that it may be the Croton farinosum of Lamarck, and it is by far more probably a lusus, occasioned by some insect. 25. Schmidelia Timoriensis. D C. Burman and Martyn have followed Linnaeus in misquoting this figure for Rhus Cominea, which is a West Indian plant ; and it is quoted by Wight and Arnott for their Schmidelia Cobbe, i. e. Rhus Cobbe of Linnaeus ; but, in its compound racemes, it answers better to the S. Timoriensis of De Candolle, and to the Ornitrophe repanda of Roxburgh, though De Candolle has queried whether the former is more than a variety of S. Cobbe. Denustedt, without sufficient grounds, has suggested that it may be the Dalechampia triphylla of Lamarck. 26. Antidesma sylvestris. Lam. 27. Syzygium caryophyllaeum of Gaert. W.fy A. Eugenia co- rymbosa. Lam. This is the Linnean Myrtus caryophyllata, and the Eugenia caryophyllata of Rox- burgh is the Caryophyllus aromaticus of Linnaeus; both of which plants are figured in tab. 153 of Plukenet's Phytographia. Eugenia corymbosa of Rox- burgh is a different species. 28. Ardisia solanacea of Roxb. Niara montanensis. Denn. I know not what grounds Dennstedt could find for placing this plant as a se- parate genus, and Mr.Don has confirmed my suspicion that it is the A . solanacea of Roxburgh. 29. Syzygium Jambolanum of DC. W.fy.A. S. caryophylli- folium. D C. Calyptranthes caryophyllifolia. Wittd. C. Cumini. Persoon. Eugenia caryophyllifolia. Lam. E. Jambolana. Roxb. Although the contrary is asserted by Roxburgh in the Flora Indica, vol. ii. p. 487, yet I apprehend that no certain character can be found to distinguish them, HORT. MAL, — VOL. V. 23 and that Drs. Wight and Arnott have rightly arranged the S. Jambolanum and S. caryophyllifolium of De Candolle, as the same species. Tab. 30. Adolia alba. Lam. Scutia indica. W.fyA. It is considered by Drs. Wight and Arnott to be an unarmed variety of Scutia indica, i. e. Rhamnus circumscissus of Linnaeus ; and Roxburgh, of the latter, says that ' the leading shoots are unarmed.' It is quoted with a query by Dennstedt for the Linnean R. lineatus, but does not sufficiently answer to Osbeck's figure and description. 31. Adolia rubra. Lam. Wight and Arnott say that they have seen specimens with leaves equally acute, and have quoted this figure jointly with tab. 30, for Scutia indica. 32. Rottlera dicocca ? Roxb. Linnaeus and several other authors have been misled by Burman to quote this figure under the names of Acatypha hispida or A.speciflora (i.e. Caturus specifiorus of Lin. Mant.), and Roxburgh has mentioned its greater af- finity with Rottlera dicocca, some specimens of which at the Linnean So- ciety it much resembles, but the capsules do not accord with Rheede's description. 33. Amelia Caretta. Ham. MS. Dennstedt considers this to be the Psychotria asiatica of Linnaeus, but it is quite different. 34. Zanthoxylum Rhetsa of DC. W.fy. A. Typalia limonella. Denn. 35. Griffithia fragrans. W.fyA. Randia malabarica. Lam. Stylocoryna? PandakiofDC. 36. Canthium parviflorum. Lam. Monetia triphylla. Denn. Misquoted by Gaertner for C. didymum. Roxburgh has two species of Can- thium with the name of parviflorum, and this, with four stamens, is one, and the following C. Rheedii is probably the other. 37. Canthium Rheedii. D C. By some authors this figure has been erroneously quoted for Monetia diacantha; by others (instead of 36) for Webera tetrandra, and by Willdenow for both. 38. Flacourtia cataphracta of Roxb. Both the flowers and fruit were unknown to Rheede, and I am indebted to Pro- fessor Don for the name. 39. Flacourtia sepiaria. Roxb. Misquoted by Linnaeus, Burman, and Lamarck, for Sideroxylon spinosum, which is Argania sideroxylon of Roemer and Schultes. 40. Sondaria cranganoorensis. Denn. Dr. Hamilton thought that this may be one of the Rhamnae, but my friend Pro- fessor Don has suggested that it belongs rather to the Celastrineze. 41. Toddalia asiatica. Lam. T. aculeata. DC. Paullinia asiatica. Lin. Scopolia aculeata, Roxb. Cranzia acu- leata. Martyn. 24 HORT. MAL. — VOL. V. Tab. 42. Bruxanelia indica. Denn. All Dennstedt's knowledge of this plant has most probably been derived from the HortusMalabaricus, and it has been suggested that it may belong to Grewia, by Lamarck, and to the Coffeacese by Poiret ; and, on the other hand, it is said be nearly allied to Memeclyon and Jambolifera, by Dr. Hamilton. 43. Phyllanthus turbinatus. Roxb. P. retusus. Denn. 44. Phyllanthus Vitis Idaea. Roxb. P. oblongifolius. Denn. Erroneously quoted in Burman's Index for the Linnean P. maderaspatensis* 45. Excaecaria Camettia. Willd. Misquoted, instead of vii. t. 45, by Lamarck, De Candolle, and others for Cissus trilobata ; all Willdenow's knowledge of this plant appears to have been derived fromRheede, and Sir J. E. Smith, in Rees's Cyclopaedia, has thrown out a query whether it is more than a variety of the Linnean E. Agallocha. 46. Grewia pilosa. Lam. Quoted by Linnaeus and most other authors for G. orientalis, and by Lamarck both for G. orientalis and for his G. pilosa, which he describes with hairy fruit, and to differ in having * Les pedoncles divisees et multiflores.' A spe- cimen, marked G. pilosa, at the Linnean Society, differs from Rheede's de- scription only in its yellowish flowers, and this figure is quoted with a mark of doubt by Wight and Arnott for G. columnaris. 47. Colubrina asiatica of Brongniart. Ceanothus asiaticus of Lin. Lam. Celastrus sepiarius. Denn. 48. Gomphia augustifolia. Vahl. Walkera serrata. Willd. Meesia serrata. Gcert. 49. Clerodendrum inerme. Roxb. Volkameria inermis of Lin. Surman. 50. Casearia esculenta. Roxb. Bedousia malabarica. Denn. Quoted with a query by Poiret for his Samydafragilis, and they appear to be nearly allied. 51. Premna longifolia of Roxb. Baldingera glandulosa. Denn. Roxburgh has not quoted this figure, but it answers to his description and spe- cimens at the Linnean Society. 52. Gomphia augustifolia Var. monstrosa. W. #. A G. malaba- rica. D C. Ochna malabarica. Poiret. Wight and Arnott consider this to be a monstrocity of tab. 48, and there is not any such difference in the appearance or description of their stamens as to warrant De Candolle in quoting the one for a Walkera, and the other for a Gomphia. See G.Sumalrana, in Hooker's Botanical Miscellany, vol. ii. p. 78. 53. Cinnamomum malabratum. Lam. Laurus malabratum. Burman. Roxburgh has quoted this figure for his L. maldbathrica, which is the C. Euca- lyptoides of Necs Von Esenbeck, and this latter author queries whether Rheede's plant may not be a variety of his C. obtusifolium ; but I take the specimen, which it most resembles at the Lianean Society, to be the L. mala- bratwn of Wallich. HORT. MAL.— VOL. V. 25 Tab. 54. Coulejia amentacea. Dcnn. I fear that a genus of Dennstcdt's coining is of no great value, and Professor Don has suggested that this may be an undescribed species of Antidesma. 55. Chionanthus Ghaeri. Ham. MS. Forsythia Mala Elengi. Denn. All Gsertner's knowledge of C. Gheeri was derived from an empty capsule which he found in a Museum at Leyden, and, as Lamarck's figure is a mere copy from Gsertner's, it is likely always to remain a doubtful species. Rheede's plant is nearly allied to the C. ramiflora of Roxburgh, and cannot belong to Forsythia. 56. Rodschiedia serrata. Denn. Rodschiedia is another most uncertain genus of Dennstedt's creation, and Professor Don thinks that this plant of Rheede's is undoubtedly a species of Croton. 57. Rheede has not noticed either the flower or the fruit, and the 0/«s albus of Rumphius, vol. i. t. 78, is probably the same tree. 58. Dalbergia paniculata of Willd. Quoted in Hamilton's MS. for D. latifolia of Willdenow, but it answers better to Roxburgh's figure of D. paniculata. Poiret conjectured that it may be a species of Sophora allied to S. keptaphylla, and that the timber called ' Bois de Bitte/ is produced by it. 59. Jonesia Asoca. Roxb. J. pinnata. Willd. Linnaeus has not quoted any figure, but there seems to be no doubt that this is the Saraca Indica of his Mantissa. 60. Cambusa baccifera. Roxb. B, scriptoria. Denn. Beesha baccifera. ft.fyS. HORTUS MALABARICUS. VOL. VI. Tab. 1. Poinciana pulcherrima. Lin. Caesalpiuia pulcherrima. Willd. 2. Caesalpinia Sappan. Lin. 3. Pongamia glabra. Vent. Galedupa indica. Lam. Dal- bergia arborea. Willd. Pongam is Rheede's name for this plant, and Ventenat has observed, " J'aurois du. peut-etre citer avec doubte le synonyme de Rheede, pareeque la Plante qui est figur^e dans 1'Hortus Malabaricus, et qui est le type du genre Pon- gamia, semble differer, surtout par la forme de ses fruits and de ses semences du Pongamia glabra." Sir W. Jones, in the Asiatic Researches, vol. iv. p. 300, has used Caranjaca for the generic name. 4. Acacia Intsia. Willd. Mimosa Intsia. Lin. 5. Acacia odoratissima of Willd. W. $ A. A. lomutocarpa. D C. Mimosa marginata. Lam. Quoted by De Candolle for his A. lomatocarpa, but he has queried whether the flowers in this figure are not too loosely panicled, &c., and Wight and Arnott appear to have decided rightly that his A . lomatocarpa and A. odoratissima are the same. 6. Ameloveenia spinosa. Denn. This may probably have no claim to constitute a separate genus, and Professor Don considers it to be a Caesalpinea, although the leaves in the figure are not bipinnate, and Rheede has described the flowers to be pentandrous. 7. Erythrina indica. Lam, E. corallodendrum Var. orientalis. Lin. 8. Caesalpinia mimusoides. Lam. 9. 1 Cassia glauca. Lam. C. arborescens. Willd. C. sul- 10. j phurea. D C. Senna arborescens. Roxb. C. arborescena of Martyn is quite different, and is a native of South America. 11. Moringa pterogosperma. Gcert. Hyperanthera moringa. Willd. Guilandina moringa. Lin. 12. Inga bigemina. Willd. Mimosa bigemina. Lin. HORT. MAL.— VOL. VI. 27 Tab. 13. Cajanus bicolor. D C. C. indicus Var. W. fy A. Most other writers have followed Linnaeus in quoting this figure or Cy lisas Cajati, which comprises the Cajanus flavus and Cajanus bicolor of De Candolle, and whether they are more than varieties is rather uncertain. 14. Adenanthera pavonina. Lin. 15. Ailantus Pongelion. Gmelin. Ailantus malabarica. DC. Adenanthera triphysa. Denn. Misquoted by Poiret for Ailantus glandulosa. ' > Butea frondosa. Roxb. Erythrina monosperma. Lam. Sir William Jones has strongly expressed a hope that this genus may be al- lowed to retain the name of Palasa, « its ancient and classical appellation.' 18. Niota pendula. Smith. N. pentapetala. Poiret. Sama- dera indica of Gaert. W. $ A. Sir J. E. Smith (in Rees's Cyc.) has shewn that there are no grounds for placing the N. tetrapetala and N. pentapetala as separate species. Plukenet first coupled the name of Samandra with the Nagam of Rheede (tab. 21.), and from hence the Samandara of Burman and the Samandura of Linnaeus's Flora Zeylanica have been derived ; and, as Gsertner's Samadera has obviously the same derivation, it may be queried, particularly from the references to Ray, whether the name does not belong to Heritiera rather than Niota. 19. Caesalpinia paniculata. Roxb. Guilandina paniculata. Lam. 20. Csesalpinia axillaris. D C. Guilandina axillaris. Lam. 21. Heritiera littoralis. H. Kew. Sutherlandia littoralis. Gmelin. See the foregoing note on tab. 18. 22. Dalbergia scandens. Roxb. Misquoted by Willdenow, Smith, and others, for D. lanceolaria of the Supple • mentum Plantarum, and as a variety of that species by Lamarck ; and De Candolle considered it to be either his D. Timorknsis or a species unknown. 23. JusticiabicalyculataofWilld. Ham. MS. J. fragilis. Denn. It is not much like Roxburgh's specimen, but may be a variety of Justicia ( Peristrophe) bicalyculala. 24. Connarus pinnatus. Lam. Dennstedt has arranged this for the Linnean C. asiaticus, and vol. vii. t. 26, for C. pinnatus. De Candolle has not quoted this figure, but C. pinnatus is his Omphalobium pinnatum; and I may here remark, that the name Omphalobium is now in use for two very different genera. See Hortus Britannicus, p. 155 and p. 277. 25. Pterocarpus Marsupium of Roxb.? W. # A. Cassia can. denatensis. Denn. This may possibly have been intended for a starved plant of P. Marstipium, which it resembles in the leaves, but the disposition of the flowers is quite dif- ferent, and the membranaceous wing of the legume is wanting. 28 HORT. MAL. — VOL. VI. Tab. 26. Bignonia Colais. Ham. MS. Quoted by the younger Linnaeus, and generally by other authors, for B. Chelo- noides, but was considered by Dr. Hamilton to be a separate species. 27. Sesbania ./Egyptiaca of Pers. W* fy A. JLschynomene Ses- ban of Lin. Roxb. Misquoted by Willdenow for Coronilla aculeata, and for Sesbania aculeata by De Candolle, and the long pendulous legumes answer better to Alpinus's figure, which Linnaeus has quoted for dE. Sesban. 28. Apama siliuosa. Lam. A. dubia of Gmelin. Lamarck's knowledge of this plant was wholly derived from the Hortus Mala- baricus, and it is most probable that Apama has been misprinted for Alpama, and that the generical name was intended to be taken from Alpam, which is Rheede's name. Plukenet has noticed its affinity with his Phytographia, tab. 96, f. 7. 29. Quoted by the younger Linnaeus and others for Bignonia Spathacca, from the description of which it materially differs, and Spathodea Rheedi is merely another name for that species ; or if taken, as the name implies, wholly from this figure, it should have been described to be octandrous. It is also mis- quoted in the Hortus Britannicus for Spathodea longiflora of Ventenat, as sy- nonymous with B. chelonoides. 30. Helicteres corylifolia. Ham. MS. Quoted by Lamarck for his H. ovata, and by Linnaeus and most other Botanists for H. Isoru. Dr. Hamilton, however, considered it to be a separate species ; but, as the leaves of H. Isora vary considerably in shape, I much doubt whether it is more than a variety. 31 ) g2* > Bruguiera Rheedii. Blume. Quoted by Linnaeus and most other writers for Rhizophora gymnorhiza, and for Bruguiera gymnorhiza by Lamarck; and it is plain that both B. Rheedii and B. cylindrica were considered by Gaertner to be nothing more than varieties of the West Indian R. Mangle. 33. Bruguiera cylindrica. Blume. B. malabarica. Arnott. Rhizophora cylindrica. Lin. Dr. Arnott has given the name of B. malabarica to this plant, and retained that of B. cylindrica for the Mangium digitatum of Rumphius, apparently under an erroneous impression that Linnaeus had quoted the Herbarium Amboinense, vol. iii. tab. 70, jointly with Rheede's figure for his B. cylindrica. It is the Mangium minus, t. 69, that Linnaeus has quoted, and this Blume considers to be the foregoing B. Rheedii. 34. Rhizophora conjugata of Lin. Arnott. R. Mangle. Roxb. (not Lin.) R. apiculata. Blume. R. candelaria. D C. Misquoted by Linnaeus and most other authors for JR. Mangk, which is now said not to have been found in the East Indies. 35. Kandelia Rheedii. W.fy A. Rhizophora Candel. Lin. 36. ^giceras majus of Gaert. Roxb. M. fragrans. C. Kcenig. Bruguiera obtusa. Denn. As pointed out by Mr. C. Konig it is the Rkisophora corniculata of Linnaeus. HORT. MAL. — VOL. VI. 29 Tab. 37. Lumnitzera racemosa of Willd. W. Sf A. Petaloma 'al- ternifolia. Roxb. Bruguiera Madagascariensis. Roxbt Funkia Cara Kandel. Denn. Dr. Jack has mentioned the affinity of this plant to his Pyrranthus litoreus, and it is quoted erroneously by Gaudichaud for Laguncularia purpurea. 38. 39. 40. ^Hibiscus mutabilis. Lin. 41. 42. 43. Hibiscus Rosa Sinensis of Lin. 44. Hibiscus aculeatus. Roxb. H. Surattensis Var. Lin. 45. Abutilon populifolium. G. Don. Sida populifolia. Lam. Abutilon indicum. W. fy A. Considered by Wight and Arnott to be the Sida indica, and by Burman this figure is quoted for the S. asiatica of Linnaeus, which may probably be nothing more than a variety. 46. Hibiscus vitifolius. Lin. 47. Ophioxylon serpentinum. Lin. (Syst. Nat.) O. trifoliatum. Gcert. Reichardiajasminoides. Denn. The leaves in this figure, probably through an error of the artists, are binate ; and though a variable plant, I have never seen any specimen in which they are less than ternate. I apprehend it is this which induced Dennstedt to give it another name, and that all his knowledge of the Reichardiajasminoides has been derived from Rheede. Most other authors, except Burman, have taken it to be an Ophioxylon, and by Poiret, who has arranged the O. serpentinum and O. trifoliatum as separate species, it is quoted for both. 48. Tabernaemontana orientalis of Brown Var. ? Reichardia grandiflora. Denn. Rheede has not noticed either the stamens or the fruit, and Dennstedt must ratherrashly have referred it to the same genus as the foregoing tab. 47. It has much the appearance of a Tabernsemontana, and except in the arrangement of the leaves, it resembles the Curutu Pala (vol. i. tab. 46), on which Linnaeus has founded his T. alternifolia, and it is at least nearly allied to the T. orientalis of Brown, but the flowers are described to be scentless. 49. Gardenia florida of Lin. ? Denn. As Rheede has not noticed the seed vessel, this must remain rather an un- certain figure, and the more so as the late Dr. Hamilton considered it to be one of the Apocynoe. For this I cannot, however, think that he had sufficient grounds, and he has suggested, from the exserted filaments, that it may belong to Farsonsia or Lyonsia, but to me it appears to be Gardenia florida. 50. Jasminum Sambac Var. Roxb. Mogorium Sambac. Lam. Misquoted by the younger Barman for his Nyctantkes mvltifora, which is J. pulescens. 30 HORT. MAL.-— VOL. VI. Tab. 51. Jasminum Sambac Var. trifoliatum. Vahl. Mogorium Sam- bac Var. Lam. Loureiro has not quoted any figure ; but this, most probably, is his Nyctanthes grandijlora. 52. Jasminum grandiflorum. Lin. 53. Jasminum angustifolium. Willd. J. angustifolium Var. laurifolium. Bot. Reg. Mogorium triflorum. Lam. Nyctanthes angustifolia. Lin. 54. Jasminum pubescens. Roxb. Mogorium multiflorum. Lam. In some points this figure answers better to Nyctantkes elongatum of the Sup- plementum Plantarum, i. e., /. elongatum of Willdenow, for which it has been quoted by Dennstedt, and the plant is said by Rheede to be inodorous, whereas both J. pubescens and /. elongatum are fragrant. 55. Jasminum undulatum Willd. Mogorium undulatum. Lam. Nyctanthes undulata. Lin. Roxburgh considered this to be only a variety of J. Sambac, which species, for its beauty and fragrance, is much cultivated in the gardens of all the warmer climates, and is therefore likely to vary much from a difference in the soil and treatment. J'. undulatum of the Botanical Register is a different species, and if the short description, exclusive of the synonym, can be relied on, it may be the Linnean Nyctanthes hirsuta. 56. Quoted erroneously by Dennstedt for Jasminum vimineum of Willdenow, and by Burmaninhis Index for 'Jasminum Nyctanthes of Linnaeus, Sp. Plant, p. 456.'? Professor Don considers it to be a Gardenia, which it otherwise resembles, but differs both in the figure and description of the stamens. 57. Capparis Heyneana. W. 8f A. Linnaeus in the Species Plantarum has confounded an American plant of Plunder's with another of Browne's, and, retaining an erroneous reference to this figure, which appears in Plunder's work, has given Rheede's name of Baducca to the species, and several authors have followed him in quoting it for C. Baducca. By De Candolle this figure is quoted for another species, from the description of which it also differs, and to which, from the supposed identity, he has given the name of C. Rheedii, and by Drs. Wight and Arnott C. Rheedi is considered to be nothing more than a variety of De Candolle's C. brevispina. 58. Pterospermum glabrescens. W. fy A. Quoted with a query by Dennstedt for Capparis mariana of Jacquin. 59. Hiptage Madablota. Geert. Gaertnera racemosa. Roxb. Molina racemosa. Lam. Banisteria benghalensis of Lin. Martyn. Succowia fimbriata. Denn. 60. Justitia picta. Lin. Gratophyllum hortense. N. Esen. 61. Croton variegatum. Lin, HORTUS MALABARICUS. VOL. VII. Tab. 1 Anamirta Cocculus. W. fy A. Cocculus suberosus of DC. W.fyA. Cissampelos Cocculus. Poiret. Menisper- muin Cocculus. Lin. Though Roxburgh has not quoted this very indifferent figure for either, it may be doubted Avhether his M. Cocculus is more than a younger plant or variety of his M. heteroclitum ; and Colebrook's description of Anamirta paniculata (i. e. A. Cocculus of W. & A.), is taken almost verbatim from the description of the latter in the Flora Indica. See Lin. Trans, xiii. p. 66. 2. Cansjera Rheedii of Gmelin. R.fyS. C. malabarica. Lam. C. scandens Var. Roxb. Daphne polystachia. Willd. 3. Cocculus acuminatus. W.fyA. C. radiatus. D C. Meni- spermum radiatum. Lam. M. glabrum of Konig. Per- soon. Braunea menispermoides. Willd. Wight and Arnott consider the Tiliacora racemosa of Colebrook to be the same species, and it appears from his MS. that Dr. Hamilton was disposed to re- move it from Cocculus with the generical name of Natsiatura. 4. Cansjera scandens. Roxb. C. malabarica Var. Lam. C. Rheedii Var. R Sf S. Daphne monostachya. Willd. Tab. 2 is the C. malabarica of Lamarck, and he has called this plant a variety ' racemulis solitariis.' 5. Strychnos minor. Denn. Quoted by Linnaeus and several other writers for S. Colubrina, but in many re- spects it answers better to the description of S.potatorum, and Dennstedt's authority for arranging it as a species otherwise undescribed than by Rheede, is very doubtful. See note on vol. viii., t. 24. 6. Vitis indica. Lin. Hamilton considered this, instead of tab. 7, to be the V. latifolia of Roxburgh, but it is quoted by Roxburgh himself for V. indica, and answers better both to the description and specimens of the latter. 7. Vitis erioclada. W.fyA. Misquoted by Roxburgh for his V. latifolia, and by Dennstedt with a query for Vitis (i. e. Cissus) viliginea of Linnaeus. In the fourth line of Rheede's De- scription, it is the opinion of Drs. Wight and Arnott that ' viscosus' is a mis- print for < villosus,' See Prod. Fl, Ind, Orien, f , 130. 32 HORT. MAL. — VOL. VII. Tab. 8. Vitis muricata of Wall. W. #. A. V. leucostaphyla. Denn. Quoted by Roxburgh and De Candolle for Cissus lanceoktria, of wbich V. mu- ricata is probably nothing more than a variety. 9. Vitis carnosa. W.fy. A. Cissus carnosa. Lam. 10. Vitis pedata. W.fy A. Cissus pedata. Lam. De Candolle has queried whether this can be C. pedata, on account of Rheede's description * Flores quinque partiti ;' but in the figure some of the flowers have four and other five petals, and a similar variation has been observed by Roxburgh in his C. feminea. Burman has mistaken this figure for the Lin- nean Sambucus canadensis. 11. Vitis latifolia. Denn. Cissus latifolius. Lam. C. glauca. Roxb. Misquoted by Linnseus in the Species Plantarum for C. vitiginea, and by Bur- man and in the Systema Naturae for C. Sicyoides. By Wight and Arnott it is quoted with a query for the V.latifolius of Roxburgh ; but Rheede has de- scribed it ' flores quadripartiti,3 and, though not a good figure, I more incline to Roxburgh's opinion, that it is his C. glauca. 12. Piper nigrum. Lin. P. aromaticum. Lam. 13. Piper Galtena. Ham. MS. Quoted with a query by Dennstedt for the Linnean P. Siriboa. 14. Piper longum. Lin. 15. Piper Betle. Lin. 16. Piper malamiri. Lin. Quoted by Lamarck for his P. plantagineurn, which Poiret has arranged as a variety of P. amalago, and by Dennstedt for the latter species, though I am not aware of its growth in the East Indies. 17. Canthium cordatum. Ham. MS. Misquoted by Linnaeus and others for Pisonia mitia, for P. inermia by Gmelin, and by Dennstedt for P. aculeatus. 18. Paederia? Valli Kara. D C. Reussia sarmentosa. Denn. Our knowledge of this plant appears to be wholly derived from the Hortus Mala- baricus, and as Rheede's figure and description do not well accord, De Candolle has placed it among the doubtful species. 19. ) Cocculus malabaricus. DC. Menispermum malabaricum. 20. j Lam. Mr. Colebrook says that this species has remained unexamined since the days of Rheede, and Dr. Hamilton has suggested that the M. hirsutum of Rox- burgh (not Willdenow) may be the same, but it does not well accord with Roxburgh's reference to Plukenet. 21. Cocculus cordifolius. DC. Menispermum cordifolium. Roxb. M. glabrum. JSurmah. HORT. MAL. — VOL. VII. 33 Tab. 22. Gnetum scandens. Roxb. G. funiculare. Smith. Thoa edulis. Willd. Loureiro has not quoted this figure, but his Abutva indica is the same species. 23 . Combretum Wightianum . W. fy A . Misquoted by Dennstedt for Amyris Protium of Willdenow, i. e. Protium Java- nicutn of Burman and De Candolle. 24. Basella cordifolia. Lam. Quoted by Linnaeus, Gsertner, and Persoon, for B. rubra, and by Willdenow both for B. rubra and B. cordifolia, and Roxburgh says that neither of these are more than cultivated varieties of the Linnean B. alba. 25. Curinila Rheedi. R. fy S. Reinera baypinensis. Denn. Lamarck, with whom the genus Curinila originated, has derived all his know- ledge of it from Rheede. 26. Connarus monocarpus of Lin. W. $• A. Dennstedt considered it to be the C.pinnatus of Cavanilles. 27. Morinda umbellata of Lin. Denn. M. padavara. Jus*. M. tetrandra. Jack. De Candolle says that this figure is either M. tetrandra or M.parvifolia, and it is probable, from the observation of Drs. Wight and Arnott, that they are not specifically distinct. M. umbellata is rather an uncertain species, of which there is not any specimen in the Linnean Herbarium, and this figure answers much better to the description in the Flora Zeylanica than the figure of Rum - phius, to which Linnaeus, in the Species Pluntarum, has referred. 28. Paratropia venulosa. W. 8f A. Aralia digitata. Roxb. He- dera terebinthinacea of Vahl. ? R.fy S. 29. Loranthus Loniceroides. Lin. L. coriaceus. Lam. Elytranthe Loniceroides of G. Don. Nearly all authors have quoted this for the Linnean L. lonicer aides, but Rheede has both figured and described it to be polyandrous. 30. Antidesma parasitica. Pothos pentandra. Denn. I have not met with any other reference to this figure, and Dennstedt's reason for calling it a Pothos I am unable to discover. Poiret says, ' il est difficile de rapprocher d'aucune des genres counus, a moins que ne soit des Loranthes ou du Guis.' I have Professor Don's authority for its being an Antidesma, and if so, it must be the male plant of a parasitical species, which is not else- where described. 31. Smilax zeylanica of Lin. Poiret. Quoted by Burman for his S. indica, which is described ' caule inermi ;' and is not the S. indica of Duhamel, which Steudel has properly arranged as a va- riety of S. zeylanica. By Dennstedt it is quoted with a query for the Linuean S. China. 32. Cynanchum Magale. Ham. MS. Dennstedt says that it is the Periploca cordata of Lamarck. £ 34 HORT. MAL.— VOL. VII. Tab. 33. Dioscorea triphylla. Lin. Quoted by Linnaeus and most other authors for D. triphylla, of which Blume considered it to be a female plant ; but Dr. Hamilton suspected that it is dis- tinct, and has proposed D.Mulu for its name. 34. Dioscorea pentaphylla of Lin. Roxb. Planta junior. Blume. This figure, by most authors, has been quoted jointly with tab. 35 for D. pen- taphylla; but in Hamilton's MS. it is referred to with llumphius, vol. v. 1. 127, for a separate species, with the name of D. Dava, and this tab. 127, is the D. dcemona of Roxburgh. Iii Burman's Index it is also quoted separately for the ' D. spinosa' of Linnaeus, with a reference both to the Species Plantarum and the Flora Indica, and there is no such species in either. 35. Dioscorea pentaphylla. Lin. 36. Dioscorea bulbifera. Lin. D. tanrifolia. Salisbury. By Wight and Arnott this figure is accidentally misquoted instead of vol. v. t. 36, for Canthium parvijlorum. 37. Dioscorea aculeata. Lin. 38. Dioscorea alata. Lin. 39. Erycibe Rheedii. Blume. Erimitalia Rheedi. JR. # S. Quoted by Roxburgh for his Erycibe paniculata, but the figure in the ' Plants of Coromandel' has altogether the appearance of being a separate species. 40. Pothos scandens. Lin. 41. Vitis quadrangularis. W. Sf A. Cissus quadrangularis of Lin. Lam. 42. Pothos drupacea. Denn. I have not met with any reference besides Dennstedt's to this figure, and it has more the habit of an Antidesma, but the flowers are tetrandrous. 43. Syama lata. Sir W. Jones. This plant of Rheede's in the Asiatic Researches has been described by Sir W, Jones with the name of Syama, and the above trivial name has been added in his copy of the Hortus Malabaricus at the Athenaeum. By Jussieu it is quoted for his Pupalia lappacea, from a suppssition that it is the Achyranthes lappacea; but for that species all other authors have followed Linnaeus in quoting vol. x. tab. 59, which is the Desmocheeta atro-purpurea of De Candolle. See Anals of Botany, vol. ii. p. 275. 44. Cassytha zeylanica of Gaert. C. filiformis. N. Esen. Quoted by Linnaeus and most other writers for C. filiformis, and under that name Linnaeus has confounded two species, the one a native of the East and the other of the West Indies. By Gaertner the name of filiformis has been re- tained for the latter, and zeylanica given to the present species; but by Nees Von Esenbeck (in Wallich, vol. ii. p. 69), it is retained for the former, and the latter is called C. americana. 45. Vitis Rheedii. W. Sf A. Cissus trilobata. Lam. Misquoted by Burman for the Linnean Vilis Irifolia, which is more likely to be the preceding tab. 9. - HORT. MAL. — VOL. VII. 35 Tab. 46. Artabotrys odoratissimus of Brown Blame. Unona un- cinata. Lam. This does not appear among the numerous synonyms which are given of A. odo- ratissimus in the Botanical Register, tab. 423 ; and, from Rheede's never having seen the fructification, it must be taken as a rather doubtful figure. 47. Ancistrocladus Heyneanus of Wallich ? W. fy A. Rheede has not at all noticed the fructification which must render this an uncer- tain figure. 48. Vitis repens. W. fy A. Cissus repens. Lam. Ingeuhoussia umbellata. Denn. Quoted by Roxburgh jointly with Rumphius, vol. v. tab. 164, fig. 1, for Cissus cordatus, and his description does not well accord with either of these figures. 49. Clypea Burmanni. W. fy A. Cissampelos hex and ra. Roxb. Menispermum peltatum. Lam. This is undoubtedly the Stnilax foliis peltatit of the Thesaurus Zeylancus, for which Burman has erroneously quoted the preceding tab. 37, and it is the Dioscorea foliis peltatis of the Flora Zeylanica, but Linnaeus has not noticed the species in either of his other works. 50. Ipomaea Batatas. Poiret. Convolvulus Batatus. Lin. Batatus edulis. G. Don. Burman, in the Flora Indica, has quoted this figure both for C. Batatas and for his Dioscorea cylindrica, and it is quoted with a query by Loureiro for Dios- corea eburnea. 51. ) Dioscorea hirsuta, in florescentia monstruosa. Blume. Dios- 52. ) corea hispid a. Denn. As Rheede has not noticed the fruit, Lamarck suggested that it may belong to Trichosanthes, and Dr. Hamilton queried whether it may not be a species of Smilax, for which he proposed the name of S. narcotica. 53. Flagellaria indica. Lin. 54. Delima? Piripu. D d. Generally quoted either as a Delima or Tetracera for the Linnean D. sarmentosa, but has been separated by De Candolle ; and all his knowledge of this pen- tandrous species appears to have been derived from Rheede. 55. Agaiosma caryophyllata. G. Don. Echites caryophyllata. Blame. Camettia crassa. Ham. MS. Quoted in the Botanical Magazine, tab. 1919, and by Romer and Schultes for the E. caryophyllata of Roxburgh, for which Roxburgh has referred to Rheede's vol. ix. tab. 14, and Dennstedt has strangely queried whether it is not the Jasminum pubescens of Willdenow. The difference between this plant and an Echites was first pointed out by Mr. Brown, in the Transactions of the Wernerian Society, vol. i. p. 60. 56. Boerhavia procumbens. Roxb. Quoted by Linnaeus for B. di/usa, and by Burman for the Linnean B. erecta, nor, from Roxburgh's observations, is it probable that either of them is more than a variety of B. procwnbcns. Vahl, however, who makes the Linuean 36 HORT. MAL. — VOL. VII. B.di/usa and B. erect a to be different species, has given the name of B. gluti- nosa to Burman's B. erecta, and as a note on the latter says, ' Talu Dama, Hort. Mai. vii. tab. 56, minima; hunc pertinet.' Tab. 57. Gloriosa superba. Lin. 58. Cyanotis cristata of D. Don. Tradescantia cristata of Lin. Blume. Tradescantia imbricata. Roxb. Burman has quoted this figure for a variety of Commelina cristata, of the Species Plantarum, which is Tradescantia cristata of the Systema Nature. 59. Nageia Putranjiva. Roxb. HORTUS MALABARICUS. VOL. VIII. Tab. 1. Lagenaria vulgaris of D C. W fy A. Cucurbita Lagenaria of Lin. Roxb. Poiret has quoted this figure for a variety of C. Lagenaria, which is cultivated in the Isle of France, and Roxburgh says, ' The shape of the fruit varies much, from that of a flask to round and cylindric.' 2. Cucurbita maxima. W.fy A. C. melopepo. Roxb. (not Lin.) This plant of Rheede's, as remarked both by Commeline and Plukenet, is the Cucurbita asperifoKa non fisso of Bauhin' a Historia (i. e., C. maxima of Duchesne), and for C. Melopepo Linnaeus has quoted the C. clypeiforntis sive Siciliana of Bauhin, which is quite a different species. 3. Benincasa cerifera. DC. Cucurbita Pepo. Roxb. (not Lin.) C. Camolenga. Ham. MS. Roxburgh mistook this plant for the Linnean C. Pepo; and, according to Plukenet, it is the Pepo oblongus of Bauhin, which Linnaeus has quoted for a variety of that species. ' > Lagenaria vulgaris — Varieties. W. 8f A. These figures are quoted with queries by Dennstedt for the Linnean Cttcumis Dudaim and Cucurbita ovifera; and in Sir W. Jones's copy at the Athenaeum, tab. iv. is marked C. colycinthus. By Lamarck they were both considered to be unknown species of Cucumis. See the foregoing note on tab. i. 6. Cucumis sativus of Lin. Roxb. Lamarck was probably misled by a remark of Commeline 's, to consider this (as well as tab. 4 and 5) to be an unknown species of Cucumis. 7. Luffa acutangula. Roxb. L. foetida. Willd. Cucumis acutangulus of Lin. Burman. This figure is quoted by several authors for L. foetida, which, though retained as a separate species by De Candolle, appears to me to be nothing more at most than a variety of L. acutangula, and there is much less difference between them than may be expected to occur in a plant so very generally cultivated in India. 8. Luffa Cattu-picinna. D C. L. pentandra. Roxb. Quoted with a query by Dennstedt for Momordica Luffa, and Linnaeus appears to have confounded more than one species under that name. It is quoted for his L. pentandra by Roxburgh, who says that he only found it in a cultivated state, and it may be queried whether L, pentandra of Don's Dictionary is the •ame species. 38 HORT. MAL. — VOL, VIII. Tab. 9. Momordica Charantia. Lin. 10. Momordica Charantia Var. Lin. M. muricata. Willd. Wight and Arnott say that there are innumerable intermediate gradations be- tween M. Charantia and M. muricata ; and such varieties may be expected in a species which is said by Roxburgh to be cultivated in all the warmer parts of Asia. Mr. G. Don has separated the M. muricata of Willdenow and of Roxburgh, though both these authors have quoted this figure, and has given the name of M. Roxburghiana to the latter, but they appear to me to be nothing more than different varieties of M. Charantia. 11. Momordica monadelpha of Roxb. Ham. MS. Variety? Misquoted by Dennstedt for M. dioica of Roxburgh ; and it appears to me that Dr. Hamilton has erred in considering it to be the M. monadelpha of Rox- burgh (i. e., Coccinea indica, see tab. 14) ; nor can I find any other species that answers at all correctly to this figure and description of Rheede's. 12. Momordica dioica of Roxb. female. W. fy A. M. hispida. Denn. M. Pavelia. Ham. MS. 13. Bryonia scabrella of Lin. Sup. Plant. Var. W.fyA. This plate is marked Bryonia scabrella in Sir W. Jones's copy at the Athenaeum. 14. Coccinea indica. W. Modecca palmata. Lam. M. tuberosa. Roxb. Tab. 20 is erroneously quoted for a variety of the Linnean Convolvulus paniculatus by Burman and others, and by Romer and Schultes for a variety of Ipomea paniculata. 22. Modecca palmata. Var. Motta. D C. 23. Modecca palmata, plan ta junior. W.fyA. M. integrifolia. Lam. M. acuminata? Blume. Roxburgh says that the leaves of young plants of his M. tuberosa are simply eordate, and afterwards become palmate, with from three to five lobes. Sir HORT. MAL. — VOL. VIII. 39 J. E. Smith objected to Modecca as 'a barbarous name,' and proposed' Blepharanthes in its stead, ' to preserve an analogy with Trichosanthes.' This figure is erroneously quoted by Dennstedt for the Convolvulus yemellus of Vahl. Tab. 24. Strychnos colubrina of Lin. Burman. For 8. colubrina Linnaeus has quoted Rheede's name for this plant, and has coupled it with ' vol. vii. tab. 5,' which error has led to much confusion in the Synonomy. 25. Aristolochia indica. Lin. 26. Bryonia umbellata. Willd. B. Rheedii. Blume. Momor- dica umbellata of Roxb. Quoted for B. umbellata with a query by Willdenow and others, and as observed by Poiret, ' les Pedoncles ne sout point en ombelle ;' but Rheede has figured a female plant, and Roxburgh says that males only have the flowers umbellate. 27. Merremia convolvulacea. Denn. Quoted with some doubt by Dr. Hamilton for his Convolvulus herederifolius, which may probably be the Evolvulus hederaceus of Burman, and C. jlavus of Willdenow, but Rheede's plant has tendrils, and in other points differs. 28. Cardiospermum Halicacabum of Lin. Burman. By Lamarck it is quoted for a variety of C. Halicacabum. 29.1 , 30. v Bauhinia scandens. Lin. B. anguina. Roxb. 31.) Linnaeus has only quoted tab. 29, which has the appearance of a seedling, for B. scandens ; whereas it is plain, from the remainder of his quotation, that the Naga mu valli, tab. 30, was intended, and this error may probably have led Roxburgh to give the name of B. scandens to the Folium lingua of Rumphius, which is the B. lingua of De Candolle. Tab. 29 is strangely quoted by Denn- stedt for the Linnean B. divaricata. *}O ^ JJg" I Entada PursaBtha. D C. Mimosa scandens. Roxb. (not Lin.) " £ Acacia scandens. Denn. These figures, though quoted by Linnaeus for his Mimosa scandens, belong to his M. Entada, and the Linnean M. scandens is the Gigalobium scandens of Browne's Jamaica, and the error originated in Browne's reference to these figures for that species. 35. Mucuna prurita. Hooker. M. pruriens. DC. Carpopogon pruriens. Roxb. Carcara pruritus. Rumphius. Although Linnaeus has quoted this figure, his Dulichos pruriens is founded on an American plant of Jacquin's ; and Sir W. Hooker, in the Botanical Mis- cellany, vol. ii. p. 350, has shewn good grounds for believing that this East Indian plant is more than a variety. In the Almagestum, Plukenet has placed them separate, with the names of Phaseolus americanus, and Phaseolus orientalis. 36. Mucuna gigantea. D C. Carpopogon giganteum. Roxb, Dolichos giganteus. Willd. Misquoted by Linnaeus for D.wens, and also for D. altissimus; both of which are natives of America, and belong to Mucuna. 40 HORT. MAL. — VOL. VIII. Tab. 37. Phaseolus trinervius. W*$ A. Quoted by Dennstedt with a query for Dolichos pilosus of Willdenow. 38. Clitoria Ternatea. Lin. C. Ternatea Var. Lam. Ternatea indica. St. Hilaire. This is the variety 'foliolis obtusioribus, (lore albido' of Lamarck, and the blue flowered variety is figured in Rumphius, vol. v. tab. 31. 39. Abrus precatorius. Lin. Syst. Nat. Glycine Abrus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 40. Hedysarum? horridum. Ham. MS. Amerimnum horridum. Denn. 41. Dolichos Sinensis Var.? W.fyA. D. Catjang. Roxb. (not Lin.) For D. Catjang Burman has quoted Rumphius v. tab. 139, of which the Amboyna name is Catjang, as well as the present figure of Rheede's, and Linnaeus has adopted Burman's species almost verbatim in his Mantissa. The specific name belongs therefore to the Amboyna plant, and D. Catjang of the Hortus Kewensis and of Roxburgh's Flora Indica (in both of which works the reference to Rumphius is omitted) may probably be a variety of the Linnean D. sinensis, as we are informed by Roxburgh that Konig con- sidered it to be. 42. Phaseolus rostratus. Wallich. P. alatus. Roxb. (not Lin.) This figure approaches very near the figure and description in the Hortus Elthamensis, from which Linnaeus most probably derived his knowledge of the P. alatus ; but Dr. Wallich thinks that P. rostratus is sufficiently distin- guished by the less spreading alse and curved pods. It is quoted with a query by Dennstedt for the Linnean P.farinosus. 43. Canavalia obtusifolia. D C. Dolichos obtusifolius. Lam. D. rotundifolius. Vahl. 44. Canavalia gladiata. W.fyA. Dolichos gladiatus. Willd. Several authors have followed Linnseus in quoting this figure for Dolichos ensi- formis, a name which he derived from Sloane's description of a West Indian species, and if the oriental plant is more than a variety, the name of ensiformis belongs to the former. 45. Canavalia virosa. W. 8f A. C. gladiata Var. DC. Dolichos virosus. Roxb. Misquoted by Dennstedt for Dolichos cultratus of Thunberg. 46. Pongamia uliginosa of DC. W.fyA. Dalbergia hetero- phylla of Willd. Denn. 47.) 48. > Zanonia indica. Lin. 49.) 50. Phaseolus Mungo of Lin. W.fyA. P.Max. Roxb. (not Lin.) Dolichos pubescens of Willd. ? Denn. Quoted by Roxburgh for the Linnean P. Max, but it answers better to the de- scription of P. Mungo, in the Mantissa 51. Dioscorea sativa. Lin, HORTUS MALABARICUS. VOL. IX. ' > Nerium odorum. Lin. N. odoratum. Lam. 3. ) Wrightia coalita. Ham. MS. W. tomentosa. G. Don. 4. 3 Nerium toraentosum. JRoxb. Periploca arborea. Denn. Wrightia tomentosa of Roemer and Schultes is a different species. 5. } Echites macrophylla. Roxb. Chonemorpha macrophylla of 6.) G.Don. Dennsteddt has queried whether it may not be the Linnean Pergularia tomentosa. 7. HolostemmaAdakodien. R. Brown. H. Rheedii. Wallich. Asclepias annularia. Roxb. Mistaken by Dennstedt for the Periploca tunicata of Willdenow. In the figure the leaves are misrepresented as alternate, but Rheede has described them ' bina et bina.' 8. Marsdenia tinctoria of R. Brown. ? Dr. Hamilton in his MS. has mentioned its affinity with Asclepias tinctoria, or A.tingens of Roxburgh, and if not the former, it is probably an undescribed species of Marsdenia. It is quoted with a query by Dennstedt for the Echites tomentosa of Vahl. 9. Cudicia gyrandra. Ham. MS. Periploca albo-flavescens. Denn. 10. Cudicia trichotoma. Ham. MS. Misquoted by Dennstedt for Periploca cordata of Lamarck. In Don's Dictionary Cudicia trichotoma of Hamilton is said to be the Parsonsia ovata of Wallich, but this figure is not referred to. 11. Cryptolepis Buchanani of R. & S. Wight. Periploca dubia. Burman. Nerium reticulatum. Roxb. It is quoted by Poiret for his Periploca mauritiano, which is a very uncertain species. 12. Echites malabarica. Lam. E. palvalli, Venn. Chone- morpha ? malabarica. Cannabis sativa of Lin. Burman. 61. J Quoted by Lamarck for his C. indica, which appears, from Roxburgh's remarks, to be only a variety of C. sativa. 62. Vernonia pectiniformis. Wight. Vernonia (or Vassinea) fragilis. Ham. MS. Conyza serrulata. Lam. It is quoted by Burman for a variety of the American Conyza odorata, and Dr. Hamilton has suggested that it should be removed from Vernonia with the generical name of Vassinea. 63. Decaneurum Epilegium? Wight. Under the name of Verbesina Lavenia, or Lavenia erecta, this figure has been quoted by Linnaeus (in the Mantissa), Burman, Willdenow, Smith, Roxburgh, and others, and De Candolle has mentioned its having some resemblance to Adenostemma viscosa, which is the same species, but it differs in having alter- nate leaves and pale blue flowers, and is by far more likely to be a Decaneurum. Dr. Hamilton has suggested, and I apprehend without sufficient grounds, that it may be a species of Balsamita, now unknown. 64. Vernonia cinereaVar. Wight. Conyza heterophylla. Lam. In Dr. Wight's opinion the Cacalia rotundifolia of Willdenow belongs to this species. 65. Pogostemon paniculatum. Bentham. Elsholtzia panicu* culata. Willd. Hyssopus cristatus. Lam. The leaves in this figure are not regularly opposite, and Lamarck considered it to be an accidental error of the artists. 66. Polycarpaea spadicea. Lam. Lahaya spadicea. JR. fy S. Mollia spadicea. Willd. in Berlin Mag. HORT. MAL, — VOL. X. 55 Tab. 67. Almania nodiflora of Brown. Wight. To the reference to this figure in Hooker's Journal, Dr. Wight has added 'pessime,' and Dennstedt has queried whether it may not be the Illecebrum capitatum of Linnaeus. 68. Emilia sonchifolia. D C. Cacalia sonchifolia. Lin. 69. Sida radicans. Cavanilles. All Cavanilles's knowledge of this plant appears to have been derived from Rheede, and, as suggested by Wight and Arnott, it may not improbably be a variety of Roxburgh's S. glutinosa. 70. Physalis angulata of Lin. N.Esen. Misquoted by Burman for the Linnean P.pubescens, and by Roxburgh for the P. minima of Willdenow. 71. Physalis minima. Lin. This figure has been quoted by almost every other author except Roxburgh for P. minima, but it does not accord with the Linnean character ' pedunculis fructiferis folio villoso longioribus.' 72. Pedalium Murex. Lin. Dr. Hamilton has suggested that this may be a separate species, but it answers very fairly to all the specimens of P. Murex that I have seen. 73. Solanum incertum. Dunal. S. nigrum. Lour, (not Lin.) Linnaeus of S. nigrum says, ' In orbis totius cultis,' which habitat may have misled Loureiro ; and this figure has also been mistaken by Martyn and Rox- burgh for S, rubrum. 74. Solanum Melongena Var. N. Esen. S. esculentum. Dunal. Misquoted by Lamarck for S. insanum of Linnaeus's Mantissa. 75. Mirabilis Jalapa of Lin. Burman' 's Index. 76. Croton polyandrum of Roxb. Ham. MS. Burman in his Index says that this is the Croton solanifolinm of the Species Plantarum, p. 1426, and of the Flora Indica, p. 205, and there is no such species in either of these works. Roxburgh's specimens of C. polyandrum, in the shape of the leaves, answer better than his description to this figure. 77. Pogostemon Heyneanum. Bentham. Quoted erroneously by Linnaeus in the Species Plantarum for Ocymumfrulescens, which is Perilla Ocymoides of the Systema Naturae, by Lamarck for O. petio- /are, and for Mentha perilloides by Willdenow. 78. Achyranthes aspera of Lin. Burman. Burman has been followed by Linnaeus in the Mantissa, and in the Hortus Ke- wensis, as well as most other works, in quoting this figure for A. aspera and the A. obtusifolia, for which it is quoted by Lamarck, belongs to the same species. Dr. Hamilton, however, doubted whether tab. 79 may not be the Linnean A. aspera, and whether Roxburgh's A. aspera and the plant here figured (unless they belong to the A.fruticosa of Lamarck) should not be ar- ranged separately with the name of A. cadelaria. Linnaeus, to his reference to Rheede, has added another to Rumphius, which I take to be erroneous, and the latter may perhaps have misled Dr. Hamilton. 56 HORT. MAL.— VOL. X. Tab. 79. Desmochaeta prostrata of D C. Achyranthes prostrata of Lin. Burman. Lamarck and Roxburgh, as well as Burman, have quoted this figure for A. pros. trata, and, per contra, Dennstedt has queried whether it may not be the A. argentea of Lamarck. Gmelin's inaccuracies are so frequent that it would be almost endless to notice them, and instead of vol. 10, tab. 40 and tab. 69, he has referred to this figure both for Verbesina biflora and Sida radicans. 80. Polygonum rivulare. Roxb. 81. Acalypha indica. Lin. 82. Tragia mercurialis. Lin. 83. Tragia mercurialis. Var. Denn. Quoted by Linnaeus, Burman, and Roxburgh, for a variety of Acalypha indica. 84. Plectranthus cordifolius. Bentham. Quoted by Lamarck for the Linnean Ocymum polystachyon, which is said by Roxburgh to inhabit ditches and wet places, whereas Rheede has described this plant, ' nascens in arenosis,' and, as was suspected by Dr. Hamilton, it is more likely to be the 0. molle of Willdenow. 85. OcymumvirgatumofThunberg. Denn. ? O. sanctum. Roxb. In Burmtn's Index this figure is quoted for O. inodorum of the Flora Indica, but Rheede has described it 'odoris grati,' and it is quoted jointly with tab. 87 for O. basilicum by Lamarck. 86. Ocymum gratissimum of Lin. Burman. 87. Ocymum Basilicum Var. anisatum. Bentham. O. Basili- cum. Lam. O. sanctum. Burman. In the Index to the Hortus Malabaricus (with an unintelligible reference to the Flora Indica of his son) the name of O. sanctum was first used for the present plant by the elder Burman, and its being held sacred by the Brahmins is men- tioned by Rheede, although other species also are said to be used in their temples. The name of O. sanctum by almost every author appears to have been given to a different species, so as to occasion much confusion ; but, if retained, it belongs on the score of priority to O. Basilicum. This figure is quoted by Roxburgh for his O. villosum. 88. Anisomeles ovata of Hort. Kew. Bentham. Ajuga disticha. Roxb. Quoted with a query by Dennstedt for the Linnean Nepela amboymca, which is arranged as a variety of this species by Bentham. The A. ovata is said, in the Hortus Kewensis, to have been first introduced to this country in 1783, by John, Earl of Bute ; but it appears, by the Almagestum Botanicum, p. 81, to have been cultivated at Hampton Court in the days of Plukenet. 89. I have not met with any reference to this figure ; Rheede's name for the species, equally with the foregoing tab. 6, and vol. ix. tab. 85, might lead us to suppose that it belongs to Lamarck's genus Ambulia, but it has alternate leaves, and differs essentially in other points. HORT. MAL. — VOL. X. 57 Tab. 90. Anisochilus carnosum. Bentham. Plectranthus carnosus. Smith. P. stroboliferus. Roxb. Lavendula carnosa. Willd. It is quoted erroneously by Linnaeus in the Species Plantarum for Nepeta indica (instead of tab. 88?), and in the Supplementum Plantarum for N. amboinica; and though not quoted, it is the Lavendula carnosa of the latter work. 91. Leucas obliqua. Ham. MS. Quoted by Sir J. E. Smith for L. zeylanica, for the Linnean Phlomis teylanica by Roxburgh, and with a query for Leucas aspera by Bentham. 92. Ocymum sanctum of Lin. Mant. Smith. Quoted with a query by Bentham for Geniosporum prostrat urn, and by Dennstedt for O. rugosum of Thunberg. See note on tab. 87, and Sir W. Jones's Obser- vations on select Indian Plants, No. 52. 93. Stemodia menthastrum. Bentham. Misquoted by Linnaeas in the Mantissa, and by most other authors, for Nepeta malabarica, and in the Hortus Britannicus both for Nepeta malabarica and Anisomeles malabarica. See Bentham on the Order Labiatse, p. 704. 94. Justicia procumbens of Lin. Burman. Plukenet suggested that this may be his tab. 164, f. 4, and Linnaeus for /. pro- cumbens has quoted two others of Plukenet's figures, and all three are dif- ferent. By Dennstedt, who is the only modern author that has noticed this figure, it is misquoted for the Linnean Ziziphora capitata, and it is by far more likely to belong to J, procumbens, which Roxburgh has described, to be a very variable species. H HORTUS MALABARICUS. VOL. XI. T 1 ' *' ' Anassa sativa of R. Brown. Bromelea Ananas. Lin. 3. Aloe perfoliata Var. Willd. A vulgaris. Lam. 4. 1 Alpinia Cardamomum. Roxb. Amomum repens. Willd. 5. 5 Amomum racemosum. Lam. Elettaria Cardamomum. Maton. 6. Amomum Granum Paradisi. Lin. Zingiber minus. Gcert. Linnaeus has quoted this figure both for Amomum Cardamomum and for .4. Granum Paradisi, and Lamark considered the latter to be nothing more than a variety of the former. 7. Curcuma Zerumbet. Roxb. Amomum latifolium. Lam. For C. Zedoaria Roxburgh has not referred either to this figure or to Rumphius, and, in the Asiatic Researches, vol. xi. p. 333, he says that it agrees better with C. Zerumbet than with C. Zedoaria, for which it has been quoted by Willdenow, Roscoe, and most other authors. 8. Costus speciosus. Willd. Banksia speciosa. Retz. Amo- mum hirsutum. Lam. Tsiana speciosa. Gmelin. Roscoe considered this to be C. araUcus, and the figure has been quoted by Linuceus with a mark of doubt for that species. 9. Kaempferia rotunda. Lin. 10. Kaempferia pandurata. Roxb. K. ovata. Roscoe. Cur- cuma rotunda. Lin. 11. Curcuma longa. Lin. Erroneously quoted by Rcemer and Schultes in their Mantissa for Keempferia pandurata. 12. Zinziber officinale. Roscoe. Amomum Zinziber. Lin. 13. Zinziber Zerumbet. Roscoe. Amomum Zerumbet. Lin. 14. Alpinia Allughas. Roscoe. Hellenia Allughas. Willd. Heritiera Allughas. Retz. 15. Aponogeton monostachyon. Lin. Sup. Saururus natans. Lin. Mant. HORT. MAL. — VOL. XI. 59 Tab. 16. Calla calyptrata of Roxb.? Misquoted by Dennstedt for the Arum macrorrhizon of Linnaeus. 17. Arum minutum. Willd. 1 Q ^ 19* > Arum campanulatum. Roxb. A. Rumphii. Gaudichaud. In Burman's Index tab. 19 is mistaken for the Linnean Dracontium polyphyllum, and Dennstedt has fallen into the same error with regard to tab. 18, and has arranged tab. 19 as a separate species, under the name of D. Paonice folium. 20. Arum divaricatum. Lin. 21. Arum gracile. Roxb. Misquoted by Gsertner and others for Tacca pinnatifida, and by Dennstedt for A rum pentaphyllum of Linnaeus, and Burman, in his Index, has called it ' Podophyllum trilobum of the Sp. Plant, p. 723.'! 22. Caladium nymphaefolium. Vent. Roxburgh doubts whether it is more than a large aquatic variety of Arum Colocasia. 23. Caladium ovatum. Willd. Arum ovatum. Lin. 24. Spbenoclea Zeylanica of Gaert. Willd. GaertneraPongati. Retz. Pongatium indicum. Lam. 25. Plectranthus rotundifolius. Bentham. Nepeta madagas- cariensis. Lam. 26. Nymphaea pubescens of Willd. Castalia sacra. Salisbury. Castalia pubescens. Rees's Enc. Misquoted in Browne's Jamaica, and by Linnaeus, Burman, Willdenow, Poiret, and Roxburgh, for Nymphtea Lotus. 27. Nymphaea stellata. Willd. N. malabarica. Poiret. Cas- talia stellaris. Salisbury. 28. Villarsia indica. Vent. V. macrophylla. Wight. Meny- anthes indica. Lin. M. indica of the Bot. Mag. t. 658, for which Dr. Sims has quoted this figure, is quite a different species, and is the V. Simsii of Don's Dictionary. 29. Villarsia cristata. Ham. MS. Menyanthes cristata. Roxb. Dennstedt has queried whether it is distinct from M. nymplioides. 30. Nelumbium speciosum Var. Willd. Nelumbium Tamara. Hort. Brit. Nelumbo nucifera. Gcert. N. indica. Persoon. 31. Nelumbium speciosum. Willd. Nelumbo indica Var. Persoon. Nymphaea Nelumbo. Lin. Cyamus Ne- lumbo. Smith. C. mysticus. Salisbury. Dr. P. Browne has quoted the foregoing tab. 30 for a Jamaica plant, which is the N. Jamaicense of De Candolle, and it has misled Linnaeus under the name of N. Nelumbo to confound the two species together. 32. Pistia stratiotes. Lin. Both Browne and Plumier have quoted this figure for an American Pistia, and Linnaeus has followed in considering them to be the same species. Plukenet 60 HORT. MAL.— VOL. XI. has repeated an observation of Commelines, ' Experientia enim nos docuit, quam plurimas ludise orientalis Plantas etiam in America reperiri/ and this opinion has been often acted on without sufficient care. It is a curious coin- cidence that Pistia has been accidentally omitted in the Index to the Species Plantarum, and that the genus is wholly unnoticed by Steudel. Tab. 33. Trapa bispinosa. Roxb. Linnaeus, Willdenow, and Lamarck have quoted this figure for the European T. natans, and it is more nearly allied to T. bicornis of the Supplementum Plantarum. The description of the latter has been obviously taken from a plant mentioned in Osbeck's Voyages, which he gathered in China, and the reference to Plumier is copied from a quotation of Osbeck's, and is probably erroneous. 34. Phrynium capitatum. Willd. Phyllodes placentaria. Lour. Pontaderia ovata. Lin. By the younger Linnaeus this figure has been referred to for Myrosma cann&folia, by other authors for Maranta attovia, and by Gmelin for both of these, and for Potitaderia ovata also ! 35. Geodorum dilatatum. Lindley. Malaxis cernua. Willd. Limodorum dcnsiflorum. Lam. Limodorum nutans. Roxb. Cistella cernua. Blume. 36. Wolfia spectabilis. Denn. I have not met with any reference besides Dennstedt's to this figure, and it may probably belong to the Scltamineae. 37. Pardanthus Chinensis. Blume. Moraea Chinensis. Willd. Ixia Chinensis. Lin. 38. Crinum defixum. Ker. C. asiaticum Var. Burman. Amaryllis vivipara. Lam. Bulbine asiatica. Gcert. Though Linnaeus in the Mantissa has added this figure to the synonyms of C. asiatica, yet the Radix toxicaria of Rumphius, which is quoted in the Species Plantarum, is more properly the Linnean species. Roxburgh has however retained the name of C. asiatica for the present plant, and given that of C. toxicaria to the latter. 39. Crinum latifolium. Lin. Amaryllis latifolia. Lam. 40. Pancratium verecundum. Ker. Misquoted by Linnaeus, and in the Encyclopedic Methodique for P. zeylanicum, and the figure answers better to Ker's description in the Transactions of the Horticultural Society, but has the segments of the corol more ovate than is usual in P. verecundum. By Steudel it is erroneously said that P. verecundum and the Linnean P. maritimum are the same. 41. Kaempferia Galanga. Lin. Alpinia sessilis. Retz. 42. Sanseviera lanuginosa~ Willd.. Salmia ebracteata. Cav. Aletris Zeylanica Var. Lam. Quoted with a mark of doubt by Linnaeus for Aletris hyacinthoides, and by Rox- burgh for Sanseviera zeylanica, which is another name for the same species ; nor has the claim of S. lanuginosa to be placed separate been at all satisfac- torily established. HORT. MAL.— VOL. XI. 61 Tab. 43. Canna indica. Lin, Dr. Hamilton thinks that this plant, which is C. indica of Roxburgh, is distinct from the Linnean species, and has proposed Sarana for its specific name. If there is more than one East Indian Canna, it however appears to me, from the references in the Flora Zeylanica, that this plant of Rheede's has the best claim to be called C. indica. 44. Pontederia vaginalis. Lin. Mant. Quoted by Linnaeus in the Spec. Plant, for P. hustata, but the error is corrected in the Mantissa. 45. Sagittaria obtusifolia. Lin. 46. Damasonium indicum. Willd. Stratiotes alismoides. Lin. Ottelia alismoides. Persoon. 47. Aeginetia indica. Willd. Orobanche jiEginetia. Lin. 48. Acorus Calamus. Lin. It may be A. Calamus without fructification, and Roxburgh says that the species is common in gardens throughout India. 49. Ipomaea paniculata. Bot. Reg. Convolvulus paniculatus. Lin. Batatas paniculata. G. Don. 50. Ipomaea grandiflora. Roxb. Calonyction Roxburghii. G. Don.. Quoted erroneously by Linnaeus in the Sp. Plant, for Iponuea Bona Nox., and some authors consider it to be distinct from the C. grandiflorus (i. e., Iponusa grandiflora of Lamarck), for which it is quoted in the Supplementum Plan- tarum. It is certainly the I. grandiflora of Roxburgh, and I think of the Botanist's Repository also. 51. Ipomaea malabarica. R.fyS. Convolvulus malabaricus. Lin. Argyreia malabarica. G. Don. 52. Ipomaea aquatica. Poiret. Convolvulus repens. Roxb. (not Lin.) C. repens of the Species Plantarum, for which it has been quoted by Linnaeus, is most probably an American, and at all events an uncertain species. 53. Ipomaea sepiaria. Roxb. Convolvulus maximus. Lin. Convolvulus marginatus. Lam. This figure is quoted in the Hortus Britannicus for /. sepiaria and also for C. maximus, and erroneously in Don's Dictionary both for the Linnean I. reptans and /. sepiaria. 54. Convolvulus Bentira. Ham. MS. C. Rheedii. Wallick? Quoted by Mr. G. Don for Aniseiauniflora, and by Dennstedt for the C.emarginatus of Vahl, which is the C. uniflorus of Burman and of the Encyclopedic Methodique ; but the leaves, as described and figured by Burman, are quite different. 55. Ipomaea sagittaefolia. Burman. I. hastata of Lin. Mant. Lam. Convolvulus Sonneratii. Rees's Cyc. Quoted by Linnaeus, Roxburgh, and several other authors, for Convolvulus medium, but it answers far better to the Linnean /. hastata, and it is referred to by Roemer and Schultes for the I. denticulata of Brown, and by G. Don for the I.filicaulis of Blume, which may possibly be nothing more than varieties. 62 HORT. MAL. — VOL. XI. Tab. 56. Ipomaea campanulata. Lin. 57. Ipomaea maritiraa of Brown. R.fy S. Convolvulus Pes Caprae. Lin. Quoted by Lamarck for a variety of his Convolvulus maritimus, which is a species at least nearly allied to our English C. Soldanetta. 58. Ipomaea Beladamboe. JR. fy S. 1. repens. Lam. I. rugosa. G. Don. Convolvulus fiagelliformis. Roxb. I. repens of Roth is a different species, and Dennstedt has no ground for his suspicion that Rheede's plant is the I. verticillata of Vahl. 59. Ipomaea Pes Tigridis. Lin. 60. Ipomaea Quamoclit. Lin. Convolvulus pennatus. Lam. Quamoclit vulgaris. G. Don. 61. Ipomaea speciosa. jR. fy S. Convolvulus speciosus. Lin. Sup. Convolvulus nervosus. Lam. Lettsomia nervosa. Roxb* Argyreia speciosa. G. Don. 62. Cocculus orbiculatus. D C. Menispermum orbiculatum of Lin. Burman. This imperfect figure, without either flower or fruit, has been quoted for Will- denow's Cissampelos convolvulacea by Roxburgh, who says, that the Linnean Menispermum orbiculatum is the same species, and De Candolle suspects that the latter may be a Cissampelos, but it does not well answer to Willdenow's description of the former. By Wight and Arnott the Linnean M. orbiculatum and M. cocculus are considered to be the same species, and they have quoted this figure jointly with vol. vii. t. 1, for Cocculus suberosus. 63. Plukenet considered it to be his Hedera baccifera, tab. 416, f. 3, and no modern author has quoted this imperfect figure. It was thought by Dr. Hamilton to be either a Thoa or a Gnetum ; but it has been suggested to me by Professor Don, that it is more nearly allied to the Incarvillea parasitica of Roxburgh, and it may probably belong to the genus ^Eschynanthus of Dr. Jack. 64. Evolvulus alsinoides. Lin. 65. Ipomaea tridentata. R. Sf S. Convolvulus tridentatus. Willd. Evolvulus tridendatus. Lin. HORTUS MALABARICUS. VOL. XII. Tab. 1. Saccolabium guttatum. Lindley. Aerides retusum. Willd. Epidendrum retusum. Lin. 2. Saccolabium praemorsum. Lindley. Aerides praeraorsum. Willd. 3. Vanda spatulata. Lindley. Limodorum spatulatum. Willd. Epidendrum spatulatum. Lin. Quoted by Mons. Richard for his Angreechum polystachyum, which he considered to be the Linnean E. spatulatum. 4. Saccolabium papillosum. Lindley. Aerides undulatum. Smith. Cymbidium praemorsum. Willd. Epiden- drum praemorsum. Roxb. Misquoted by Linnaeus for his Epidendrum furvum, which is Vanda furva of Lindley. 5. Cymbidium tenuifolium. Willd. Epidendrum ten ui folium. Lin. 6. Cymbidium tenuifolium Var. Denn. Of this plant Rheede says that it is similar to the preceding tab. 5, ' nisi quod nunquam floreat, et folia paulo longiora, latiora et rigidiora sunt/ 7. Cymbidium ovatum. Willd. Epidendrum ovatum. Lin. 8. Cymbidium aloifolium. Willd. Epidendrum aloifolium. Lin. Epidendrum aloides. Bot. Mag. 9. Arum viviparum. Roxb. 10. Hemionitis trinervis. Ham. MS. Asplenium Arifolium. Bur man. 11. Polypodium quercifolium. Lin. 12. Is mentioned by Swartz, in Schrader's Journal, as an undescribed species of Acrostichum, and has been quoted erroneously by Burman for the Linnean Polypodium dissimile, and by Dennstedt with a query for the P. tricuspe of Swartz. Professor Don considers it to be the West Indian P. aureum of Linnaeus, and the frond which Rheede has figured being barren, may account for some difference in its appearance. 64 SORT. MAL.— VOL. XII. Tab. 13. Quoted generally for the lower part of the foregoing tab. 12, which Rheede con- sidered it to be, and from the prickles Professor Don thinks that it is much more probably the Caudex of a Zalacca or Calamus. 14. Lycopodium Phlegmaria. Lin. 15. Diplazium malabaricum. Blume. D. denticulosum. Gaudichaud. Asplenium ambiguum. Swartz. Asplenium heterophyllum of Roxburgh's Hortus Bengalensis is probably the same species. 16. Asplenium alternifrons. Aspidium alternifrons. Denn. Considered to be an undescribed Asplenium both by Swartz and Dr. Hamilton. 17. Polypodium obtusum. Ham. MS, Quoted by Linnaeus and others for Polypodium parasiticum, and for Aspidium parasiticum by Willdenow, but the accuracy of this reference has been denied by Dr. Hamilton as well as Blume. 18. Asplenium falcatum. Lam. Trichomanes adiantoides of Lin. Burman. Quoted with a query by Blume for his Asplenium canaliculatum, which is very nearly allied to A. falcatum of Lamarck, but A. falcatum of Thunberg is another species. 19. Acrostichum flagelliferum. Wallich. ^J' j Pothos pertusa. Roxb. Misquoted by Burman for his Polypodium laciniatum. 22. Epidendrum sterile. Lam. Rheede has not noticed the infloresence either of this plant or of tab. 23, and it is almost impossible to ascertain the species of Bolbophyllum to which they belong. 23. Epidendrum sterile Var. Lam. Dendrobium reptans ? Swartz. Is obviously a Bolbophyllum. See the foregoing note on tab. 22. 24. Pholidota imbricata. Lindley. Cymbidium imbricatum. Willd. 25. Eulophia virens of Lindley. Limodorum virens. Roxb. Rheede never saw the flower, and it is an uncertain figure. 26. Eulophia carinata. Lindley. Limodorum carinatum. Willd. Limodorum variegatum. Lamarck. 27. Microstylis Rheedi. Lindley. Malaxis Rheedii. Willd. Epidendrum resupinatum. Forster. Dr. Lindley suspects that Crepidium Rheedii of Blume is the same species. 28. Liparis odorata. Lindley. Malaxis odorata. Willd, HORT. MAL.— VOL. XII. 65 Tab. 29. Niphobolus carnosus. Blume. Acrostichum heterophyllum. Lin. Quoted ,by Willdenow for Polypodium adnescens, for Cyclophorus adnescens by Desrousseaux, for Nothochleena piloselloides (i. e., Pteris piloselloides of Lin.) by Kaulfuss, and in the Hortus Britannicus for Niphobolus adnescens, but is said to be a distinct species by Blume. 30. Tragia colorata? Lam. Of T. colorata Poiret says, 'Cette plante a de tres grands rapports avec la figure de Rheede; mais lea feuilles y sont representees aigues; les Echantillons que I'ai observes dans 1'Herbier de M. Lamarck ont tous les feuilles obtuses.' . It has been suggested by Dr. Hamilton, that it may represent the branch of a tree with a parasite growing on it like Ivy. 31. Aspidium splendens. Willd. Polypodium punclulatum. Poiret. The P. punctulatum of Vahl appears to be quite a different species, 32. Lygodium flexuosum. Swartz. Ophioglossum flexuosum. Lin. This figure has been quoted by Willdenow for his Hydroglossum flexuosum, which is said by Swartz to be a different species. 33. Lygodium pinnatifidum. Swartz. Hydroglossum pinnati- fidum. Willd. Misquoted by Linnaeus (instead of 34?) for Ophioglossum scandens, and by Gmelin for Acrosticum lanceolatum. 34. Lygodium scandens, Swartz. L. microphyllum. Blume. Hydroglossum scandens, frons sterilis. Willd. This figure in the Hortus Bengalensis is quoted for Ophioglossum filiforme, and for Osmunda scandens by Gmelin. 35. Lomaria scandens, frons sterilis. Willd. Onoclea scandens. Poiret. Pteris scandens. Roxb. Polypodium palustre, Var. Burman. 36. Limnophila gratioloides of Brown. Smith. Hydropityon pedunculatum. D C. Columneabalsamica. Roxb. Hot- tonia indica. Lin. Misquoted by Gsertner for Hydropityon Zeylanicum, which differs in having the flowers sessile and decandrous; whereas Rheede has described this plant with only two stamens ; and in Don's Dictionary it is quoted both for //. pe~ dunculatum and for L. gratioloides. It is the L. trifida of Sprengel, and is generally considered to be the Gratiola trifida of Willdenow, although Willde- now, for that species, has quoted vol. ix, t. 85, instead of this figure. 37. Dillenius has noticed the affinity of this moss with Bryum punctatum, and I cannot find any species which answers to it either in Hooker's Musci Exotic! or Botanical Miscellany. 38. Isolepis squarrosa of Brown. R. 8f S. Scirpus squarrosus. Lin. Mant. The reference in the Mantissa for S. squarrosus is singularly erroneous, but there can be no doubt that t 38 was intended. This figure is quoted with a query by Burman for S, capillaris of the Species Plantarum, and Linnaeus I <36 HORT. MAL. — VOL. XII. has altered the description of that species in the Mantissa. Isolepis squarrosa of Carmichael in the Linneau Transactions, vol. xii., is another species, and the name has been changed by Schultes to /. acugnana. Tab. 39. Lycopodium cernuum. Lin. Rheede's descriptions of tab. 39 and 40 are wrongly numbered, and that marked 40 belongs to this plate, and vice versa. 40. Adiantum lunulatum. Burmanfy H.fyG. Pteris lunulata. Roxb. 41. Eragrostis plumosa of Schultes. Poa plumosa of Retz. Roxb. Quoted by Linnseas both for Panicum patens and Poa tenetta, and by Rremer and Schultes for Eragrostis tenella, to which it is nearly allied. 42. Cyperus elatus of Lin.? RotbolL C. venustus of R. Brown. Wight. Misquoted by Vahl for his C. canescens, and by Roxburgh for the C. alopecu- roides of Rotboll, which was considered by Willdenow to be the Linnean C. glomeratus. 43. Andropogon aciculatum of Retz. Roxb. Quoted by Burman for the Linnean Scirpus corymbosus, and by Vahl for his Rhynchospora aurea, which is probably the same species. 44. Paspalum longiflorum of Retz. Roxb. Mistaken by Dennstedt for the Linneau Andropogon muticum. 45. Digitaria malabarica. JR. fy S. Syntherisma malabarica. Swartz. Festuca indica. Retz. Melica diandra of Roxb. Poa malabarica of Lin. It is quoted with a query by Lamarck for his Panicum miliare, and by Roemer and Schultes both for D. malabarica and for F.indica ; and Sprengel's Diplachne indica may probably be the same species. 46. Saccharum exaltatum. Roxb. Roxburgh considered it to be this species rather than S.epontaneum, for which, or as Imperata spontanea, it has been quoted by Linnaeus and most other authors, except Burman, who mistook it for the Linnean Panicum alopecuroideum. 47. Panicum Dactylon of Roxb. Cnot Lin.) Agrostis linearis of Kcenig. Sir W. Jones. Although it is not quoted either by Retz or Roxburgh, there can be no doubt that this ' Durba' ' plurimis ceremoniis in religione Bramannum celebratur' is the A. linear is of the former and P. Dactylon of the latter; and we have the authority of Mr. Lambert (in Lin. Trans, vol. vii.) for considering P. Dactylon to be a native of the East Indies as well as of Great Britain; the fructification however appears to me to differ materially in our Cornish plant, and Sir W. Jones says, that ' its flowers, in their perfect state, are among the loveliest objects in the vegetable world, and appear, through a lens, like minute rubies and emeralds in constant motion from the least breath of air.' This figure is quoted with a query for Paspalum africanum by Poiret. 48. Scleria lithosperma. Willd. Schoenus lithospermus. Lin. Misquoted by Poiret for Scleria Flagellum, and by Linnaeus this West Indian negro scourge has been confounded with Rheede's plant, under the name of S. lithospermus. HORT. MAL. — VOL. XII. 67 Tab. 49. Ischaemum muticum. Lin. 50. Cyperus rotundus of Lin. Quoted by Roxburgh, and with a query by Rotboll, for C. procerus, but it an- swers better to the C. hexastachyos of Rotboll, and to the figure and description of Scheuchzer's, which Linnaeas has quoted for C. rotundus. By DennsUdt it is referred to with a query for the C. Pangorei of Retz. 51. Chloris barbata. Roxb. Andropogon barbatumof Lin. Mant. Lam. 52. Kyllinga triceps. Rotboll. K. tricephala. St. Hil. Schcenus tuberosus. Burman. 53. Kyllinga monocephala. Rotboll. Schcenus coloratus Var. Lin. In Sir W. Jones's copy this plate is marked Schcenus niveus, and it is quoted by Poiret for the Linnean S. niveus; on the other hand, in General Hardwick's copy, it is marked S.cephalotes of Lin. According to Muhlenberg, K. mono- cephala has been found as far north as New Jersey, and he has also described K. triceps to be a native of the United States, but they are both treated as tropical plants in the stoves at Kew. 54. Cyperus pygmseus of Vahl. Wight. Cyperus diffusus. Roxb. Cyperus mulenpulla. R. fy. S. Either as a Scirpus or a Fimbristylis it is misquoted by Rotboll, and most other authors, for S.argenteus; but Poiret (Enc. Meth. Sup. v. p. 90) says that it is not S. argenteus, but S. monander of Rotboll. It is the Cyperus musarius of Hamilton's MS., who doubted whether Roxburgh's C. diffusus is the same species. 55. Cyperus ventricosus. R. Brown. Quoted erroneously by Rotboll for the Linnean C. Kgularis, and by Deonstedt with a query for C.racemosus of Retz. 56. Cyperus inundatus of Roxb. In all probability Linnaeus described a Chinese plant of Osbeck's, and, from their general similarity, quoted the present figure and Plukenet's t. 191, fig. 7, (which Plukenet himself had arranged separately), and then gave Rheede's name, Ira, to the species. Roxburgh also has quoted both these figures, but with a remark that Plukenet's answers best for his C. Iria ; and, as suggested by Dr. Hamilton, this plant of Rheede's may probably be his C. inundatus. 57. Andropogon Iwarancusa of Roxb. Ham. MS. A. schoenan- thus Var. Lam. A. Iwarancusa is supposed by Roxburgh to be the plant described by Sir Gilbert Blane, with the name of Spikenard, in the Philosophical Transactions, vol. Ixxx., and probably Sir Gilbert may have erred in saying that ' it is not to be met with among the many hundreds of plants delineated in the Hortus Malabaricus.' The Spikenard of the ancients is however shewn by two papers from Sir W. Jones, and a third from Dr. Roxburgh, in the Asiatic Researches, to be one of the Valerianeoo, i. e. Nardostachys Jatamansi of Don's Dictionary. 58. Hypolytrum giganteum of Wallich. Wight. Schoenus nemorum. Vahl. This figure is quoted with a query by Rotboll for Fuirena umbellata, and Vahl of S. nemorum says, 'A Schcenis differt calyce bivalvi intra squamam j a Ma- 68 HORT. MAL.— VOL, XII. chaerina setarum defectu et habitu j a Hypaelyptis paleis persistentibus et habitu diversissimo ; forte rectius proprii generis.' Dr. Wight says that it is the Tunga diandra of Roxburgh, and the Hypoelytrum nemorum which Beauvais has figured for Vahl's S. nemorum is probably another species. Tab. 59. Curculigo orchioides. Roxb. In General Hardwick's copy this plate is marked ' Scilla radicans.' 60. Zizania terrestris. Lin. Sir J. E. Smith has remarked that Linnaeus described his Zizania terrestris from the Hortus Malabaricus alone, and all the other descriptions that I have met with have been equally borrowed from Rheede. 61. Panicum miliaceum of Lin. Dr. Hamilton doubted whether it may not be the P. ramosum of Linnaeus's Mantissa. 62. Perotis latifolia. Hort. Kew. Saccharum spicatum. Lin. Linnaeus has throughout quo ted this figure of Rheede 's for his Saccharum spicatum. and supposing that another plant may, in the first edition of the Species Planta- rum, have been intended, there can be no doubt that S. spicatum of other editions is the Perotis latifolia, but this figure has been erroneously quoted by Burman for his S. spicatum, which is quite different, and is the S. spicatum of Smith ; the former is tab. 119, fig. 1, and the latter is tab. 92, fig. 5, of Plukenet's Phytographia. In the Flora Zeylanica, Plukenet, 1. 119, f. 1, is also quoted for Anthoxanthum indicum, and though Linnseus afterwards omitted this refe- rence, his A. indicum and S. spicatum are probably synonymous. 63. Mariscus umbellatus. Vahl. Kyllinga umbellata. Rotboll. This figure answers almost equally to M. umbellatus and M . cyperinus of Vahl, and it is quoted for the latter by Dr. Wight. 64. Calamus gracilis. Roxb. C. petraeus of Lour. Poiret. Quoted by Linnseus, Burman, Willdenow, and Dennstedt for C. Rotang, but it has more the appearance of Willdenow's C. equestris. 65. Calamus Scipionum of Loureiro. ? Poiret. Roxburgh, in the Hortus Bengalensis, has quoted this figure for his C. latifolius, but the reference is omitted in the Flora Indica, and t. 66 answers better to it. It is misquoted by Dennstedt for the C. niger of Willdenow, and by no means accurately accords with Loureiro's description of C. scipionum, 66. Calamus latifolius of Roxburgh. Mistaken by Dennstedt for the C. viminalis of Willdenow. 67. Schrenus pauiculatus. Burman. In the Herbarium Arnboinense this is said to be the Carex amloinicus of Rum- phius, vol. vi. t. 8, f. 1, although they have a different appearance, and both these figures are quoted by Burman in the Flora Indica for his S.paniculatus, which is a very uncertain species. It is referred to with a query by Rotboll for S. Surimanensis. 68. Eriocaulon setaceum. Lin. 69. Cynosurus Cavara. Ham. MS. Under that generical name, or of Eleusine, most authors have followed Linnaeus in quoting this figure for his Cynosurus indicus; and either as an Eleusine, or HORT. MAL, — VOL. XII. 69 Dactyloctenium, it is quoted by others for the Linnean C. dEgyptius, and it is referred to in Rees's Cyclopaedia for both. Of these two it is most nearly allied to the latter ; but Dr. Hamilton considered it, and I think rightly, to be a separate species. Tab. 70. Coix Lachryma. Lin. 71 . Isolepis articulata. Wight. Scirpus articulatus. Lin. 72. Andropogon Schcenanthus of Lin. Roxb* A. Schoananthus Var. Lam. Cymbopogon Schoenanthus. Sprengel. To Rheede's imperfect figure of this interesting species, Wallich's tab. 280 presents a splendid contrast. 73. Arundo Karka of Retz and Roxburgh. Trichoon Karki of Roth. (Cat. Bot.) 74. Polypodium acrostichoides. Swartz.? Acrostichum lan- ceolatum. Lin.? Quoted by Linnaeus and others for A. lanceolatum, and by Swartz and Willdenow for P. acrostichoides, which, according to Blume, are two different species of Niphobolus, and from the Synomyns of both he has excluded the present figure. As suggested by Dr. Hamilton it may probably be a species of Vit- taria, allied to the V. revoluta of Don's Prodromus. 75. Spinifex dioicus. Ham. MS. Linnaeus, in the Mantissa, has been apparently misled by Rumphius to quote this figure for his Stipa spinifex (i. e. Spinifex squarrosus of the Supplement), and it is also quoted erroneously by Burman for his Stipa littorea. On the other hand, Osbeck has quoted it for a plant which he gathered on the river side near Canton, and which he considered to be the Linnean Cypents Haspan. 76. Polygonum rivulare. Roxb. Quoted by Linnaeus and others for P. orientale, but the leaves are not sufficiently ovate for that species ; and it is said by Dennstedt, on what grounds I know not, to be the P. barbatum of Gmelin. 77. Polygonum glabrum of Willd. Roxb. Misquoted by Linnaeus, Burman, and Willdenow, for P. barbatum, and bjr Dennstedt for the Linnean P. orientale. 78. Eleusine coracana. Per soon. Cynosurus coracanus. Lin. 79. Holcus spicatus of Lin. Burman. Pennisetum spicatum. Persoon. ? Quoted with a query by Dennstedt for Panicum italicum, and Roxburgh, who considered his P. spicatum to be the Linnean H. spicatus, has followed Linnaeus in quoting Flukenet, tab. 32, fig. 4, which has a more compact and cylindrical spike than is here represented. OMISSIONS IN VOL. IV. Tab. 22. (Add as synonymous) Munchausia ovata. St. HH* Tab. 33. (Add as a note). Misquoted by Poiret, in his Supplement to Lamarck's Illustrations, for Hard- wickia binata of Roxburgh. ERRATA. Vol. v. t. 32. For Caturus speciflorus, read spiciflorus. 48 and 52. For Gomphia awgustifolia, read angustifolia. vi. t. 28. For Apama siluosa, read silfquosa. x. t. 48. For Tiaridium velutinnm, read velutinum. xi. t. 34. For Pontaderia, read Pontederia. MURRAY AND REES, PRINTERS, SWANSEA, 14 DAY USE RETURN TO DESK FROM WHICH BORROWED This book is due on the last date stamped below, or on the date to which renewed. Renewed books are subject to immediate recall. AUG 3 1 ADS 2 &* U.C. BERKELEY LIBRARIES