Additional notes (click to expand)

Commemorative

The genus was named after Matthias de L’Obel or Lobel (1538–1616), Flemish botanist and physician to James I of England. The family name of L’Obel derives from the French word for the white poplar, ‘aubel’. He was born in Rijsel near Lille in northern France, studied medicine at Leuven (Louvain), where Dodoens studied 20 years previously, and both medicine and botany at Montpelier University (1565– c. 1568), where he was taught by perhaps the most famous teacher of the age, Guillaume Rondelet, regius professor of medicine. Rondelet was so impressed with L’Obel that he gave him all his books. Here L’Obel met Pierre Pena. They came to England in 1569 in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I (1533–1603), and travelled together collecting native plants. When Pena returned to the Continent in 1571 to practise medicine, L’Obel, who had married an Englishwoman, stayed in England for a few months longer. When he returned to the Low Countries (the Netherlands) he practised medicine in Antwerp and then Delft from 1571 to 1581, returning to Antwerp where he became physician to William the Silent, Prince of Orange. After the latter’s assassination in 1584, he returned to England and became superintendent of the garden of Lord Zouche in Hackney. He helped John Gerard publish his herbal (in 1597), an English translation of Dodoens’ herbal, correcting Gerard’s many mistakes and identifying the woodcuts – the majority of which had been used in the earlier herbals of Fuchs, Mattioli, Dodoens and his own books. In 1606, he became physician and botanist to James I (King of England, 1603–25) and thereafter remained in England, living with his married daughter in Highgate untilhis death.He was buried at the church of St Denis, Highgate, near London.
Oakeley, Dr. Henry. (2012). Doctors in the Medicinal Garden. Plants named after physicians. Royal College of Physicians. page 103 link

He is best known as the author, with Pierre Pena, of the herbal Nova stirpium adversaria (1570/1) published by Thomas Purfoot of London while they were still in England. This was followed by his beautifully illustrated Plantarum seu Stirpium Historia (1576) published by Christopher Plantin of Antwerp, when L’Obel was back in the Netherlands. They can be regarded as a two-volume work as the index to the second edition of the adversaria covers both books. In these they produced one of the earliest classifi cations of plants, grouping them primarily by leaf structure, which resulted in them separating monocotyledons from dicotyledons, although he did not use these terms. For people seeking identifi cation of a plant, all the plants with similar leaf structure – for example, Ranunculus, Aconitum, Helleborus, Geranium, Ricinus, Levisticum with heavily dissected leaves – were grouped together so could be readily compared. This was in marked contrast to Leonhart Fuchs (in 1542) and William Turner (in 1551–68) whose herbals arrange the plants more or less in alphabetical order of their Latin names. In all they described 1,500 species, with heir medicinal uses in the Stirpium adversaria, but in the Plantarum L’Obel increased the number of woodcuts from 268 to over 2,000 – mostly obtained from the printers of the works of L’Escluse, Dodoens and Mattioli. Linnaeus (1753) has always been credited with introducing the binomial system of genus + species for naming plants, but L’Obel and the other herbalists were already doing this. L’Obel’s Latin index often gave the genus name and author, with frequent binomials, sometimes also with the author, eg Moly Hippocratis; Moly Plin[y]; Mentha tertia Dod[onaeus]. In 1581, L’Obel published his Kruydtboeck in Flemish with 2,181 woodcuts and 1,306 pages, and Plantarum seu stirpium icones (pictures only), but referenced to where the descriptions could be found in his earlier works. The Icones was heavily quoted by Linnaeus in 1753.
Oakeley, Dr. Henry. (2012). Doctors in the Medicinal Garden. Plants named after physicians. Royal College of Physicians. page 105 link

Horticulture

In the family Campanulaceae, Lobelia tupa is an erect perennial from Chile. Striking red flower spikes appear against velvety grey-green leaves in late summer. In the Medicinal Garden, it grows well in a sheltered sunny position in fertile, moist soil. Our plants have been prone to the pest red spider mite, which is less of a problem in a position with good air circulation and regular misting in dry weather.(Clare Beacham)
Oakeley, Dr. Henry. (2012). Doctors in the Medicinal Garden. Plants named after physicians. Royal College of Physicians. link

Medicinal

Tabaco del Diablo [Devil's tobacco]. Dried leaves are smoked as a hallucinogen by the Mapuchu Indians of Chile. It was also used as a respiratory stimulant. Lobeline, a chemical from the plant has nicotine like actions and for a while lobeline was used to help people withdraw from smoking, but was found to be ineffective.
Oakeley, Dr. Henry F. (2013). Wellcome Library notes. link

Nomenclature

Named in honour of Mathias de L'Obel (1538-1616), Flemish botanist and physician to James I of England, author with Pierre Pena of 'Stirpium adversaria nova' (1570/1) and then 'Plantarum seu Stirpium Historia' (1576) with 1,486 woodcuts of plants. Lobel helped John Gerard publish the 'Herball' in 1597, providing him with hundreds of woodcuts from Christopher Plantin, his own publisher, and trying to correct Gerard's many mistakes. See under 'Commemorative' for more details. The specific name 'tupa' indicates its South American origin and in the Guarani language means "supreme good". Guarani is an indigenous language from Paraguay, Bolivia, Brazil and Argentina.
Notes from Henry Oakeley

Lobelia tupa

Family: CAMPANULACEAE
Genus: Lobelia
Species: tupa
Common names: Devils' Tobacco
Distribution summary: Chile
Habit: Perennial
Hardiness: H4 - Hardy; average winter
Habitat: Wooded slopes, in the open and amongst shrubs
Garden status: Currently grown
Garden location: Olive tree bed (O)
Flowering months: August, September
Reason for growing: Commemorative, medicinal, other use, toxic


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