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Patrick Russell
(1727 - 1805)

An Account of Indian Serpents, collected on the Coast of Coromandel; containing descriptions and drawings of each pieces; together with experiments and remarks on their several poisons



Patrick Russell, An account of Indian serpents, collected on the coast of Coromandel; containing descriptions and drawings of each species; together with experiments and remarks on their several poisons , London: Printed by W Bulmer and Co for George Nicol, 1796

viii, 80 pages and 44 of 46 aquatint plates (2 missing that of plate no. 3 and 41) on 45 sheets, all but 2 hand-coloured; rebound in half leather bound with marbled boards and gilt text to the spine with 5 raised bands, new marble endpapers
52 x 38.5 x 3 cm

The first work devoted to Indian snakes. Patrick Russell (1727-1805), employed as a naturalist by the East India Company, describes 43 snakes, with special attention given to the effects of their bites, and experiments into remedies. A continuation to the work was issued in 1809.

“In 1781, after his younger brother Claud had been appointed administrator of Vizagapatam, Russell accompanied him to India, and in November 1785 he succeeded the Dane John Gerard Koenig as botanist to the East India Company in the Carnatic. In this capacity he made large collections of specimens and drawings of the plants, fishes, and reptiles of the country and he proposed to the governor of Madras in 1785 that the company's medical officers and others should be officially requested to collect specimens and information concerning useful plants of the various districts of India. In 1787 he drew up a preliminary memoir on the poisonous snakes of the Coromandel coast, which was printed officially at Madras... [In 1794] he wrote the preface to the Plants of the Coast of Coromandel by William Roxburgh, a sumptuous work published at the expense of the East India Company, and one outcome of his own recommendations made ten years before. In 1796 he published on the same scale, at the cost of the company, the first fascicle of his Account of Indian Serpents in folio, with forty-six plates, forty-four of which were the product of a huge collaborative enterprise in which Russell enlisted the help of other company servants. Russell's Account also relied heavily on Indian knowledge, although he subjected local wisdom to the trial of experiment and his own observations.” (ODNB)

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  Lot 60 of 100  

ANTIQUARIAN BOOKS: IN PURSUIT OF THE PICTURESQUE
4-5 MAY 2022

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