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Good catch - I don't know where I thought it was stated that Castillejo was Mutis teacher. In any event, the fact that Castillejo was at Cadiz later doesn't need to be spelled out.
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'''Domingo Castillejo''' or Castillejos (died 1786) was a [[Spanish people|Spanish]] [[botanist]]. From 1770 to 1786, he served as a professor of [[materia medica]] and botany at the [[Royal Naval College of Surgery]] in [[Cádiz]], during which time his studies were devoted to the flora of the southern [[Iberian Peninsula]].<ref name=Amaya/><ref>Cabrera Afonso, J.R., Márquez Espinós, C., Fuentes Ximénez, J.L. El Lorquino Domingo Castillejos y su produccion Cientifica en el Real Colegio de Cirgia de Cadiz. 1988. Actas de VIII Congreso Nacional de Historia de la Medicina. Murcia-Cartagena. volume II. pages 680-689.[http://www.sehm.es/pages/reuniones-y-congresos/actas]</ref><ref>Erroneous vital dates are often associated with Castillejo, perhaps following [[Edmund Jaeger]]. A Source-book of biological names and terms. third edition. 1955. page 309, where the author states that the genus Castilleia is named for "Castillio, Juan (1744-1793)" apparently confusing Castillejo with [[Juan Diego del Castillo]]</ref> Among the many positions he held during this time was Cádiz correspondent for the [[Royal Botanical Garden of Madrid]]; in this position he received many new plants imported from the [[New World]], and [[acclimatized]] them for distribution to other [[nurseries]] throughout [[Spain]] and the [[Canary Islands]].<ref>{{cite journal
'''Domingo Castillejo''' or Castillejos (died 1786) was a [[Spanish people|Spanish]] [[botanist]]. From 1770 to 1786, he served as a professor of [[materia medica]] and botany at the [[Royal Naval College of Surgery]] in [[Cádiz]], during which time his studies were devoted to the flora of the southern [[Iberian Peninsula]].<ref name=Amaya/><ref>Cabrera Afonso, J.R., Márquez Espinós, C., Fuentes Ximénez, J.L. El Lorquino Domingo Castillejos y su produccion Cientifica en el Real Colegio de Cirgia de Cadiz. 1988. Actas de VIII Congreso Nacional de Historia de la Medicina. Murcia-Cartagena. volume II. pages 680-689.[http://www.sehm.es/pages/reuniones-y-congresos/actas]</ref><ref>Erroneous vital dates are often associated with Castillejo, perhaps following [[Edmund Jaeger]]. A Source-book of biological names and terms. third edition. 1955. page 309, where the author states that the genus Castilleia is named for "Castillio, Juan (1744-1793)" apparently confusing Castillejo with [[Juan Diego del Castillo]]</ref> Among the many positions he held during this time was Cádiz correspondent for the [[Royal Botanical Garden of Madrid]]; in this position he received many new plants imported from the [[New World]], and [[acclimatized]] them for distribution to other [[plant nursery|nurseries]] throughout [[Spain]] and the [[Canary Islands]].<ref>{{cite journal
| last = Puerto Sarmiento
| last = Puerto Sarmiento
| first = Francisco Javier
| first = Francisco Javier

Revision as of 02:38, 4 November 2014

Domingo Castillejo
Bornunknown
Died1786
NationalitySpanish
Scientific career
Fieldsbotany

Domingo Castillejo or Castillejos (died 1786) was a Spanish botanist. From 1770 to 1786, he served as a professor of materia medica and botany at the Royal Naval College of Surgery in Cádiz, during which time his studies were devoted to the flora of the southern Iberian Peninsula.[1][2][3] Among the many positions he held during this time was Cádiz correspondent for the Royal Botanical Garden of Madrid; in this position he received many new plants imported from the New World, and acclimatized them for distribution to other nurseries throughout Spain and the Canary Islands.[4]

The illustrious botanist José Celestino Mutis, a contemporary of Castillejo, named the plant genus Castilleja in his honor.[1]

Following Castillejo's death, his academic position was filled by another of his students, Francisco Arjona, who continued Castillejo's studies of the flora of the Cádiz region.[5]

References

This article incorporates material from Spanish Wikipedia

  1. ^ a b Amaya, José Antonio (1999). "Nombres genéricos dedicados a personajes concretos por Mutis y sus colaboradores (1760-1811)". In Amaya, José Antonio; Forero, Olga Restrepo (eds.). Ciencia y Representación: Dispositivos en la construcción, la circulación y la validación del conocimiento científico (PDF) (in Spanish). Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Programa Universitario de Investigación en Ciencia, Tecnología y Cultura. pp. 199–243. ISBN 9588051541. p.224.
  2. ^ Cabrera Afonso, J.R., Márquez Espinós, C., Fuentes Ximénez, J.L. El Lorquino Domingo Castillejos y su produccion Cientifica en el Real Colegio de Cirgia de Cadiz. 1988. Actas de VIII Congreso Nacional de Historia de la Medicina. Murcia-Cartagena. volume II. pages 680-689.[1]
  3. ^ Erroneous vital dates are often associated with Castillejo, perhaps following Edmund Jaeger. A Source-book of biological names and terms. third edition. 1955. page 309, where the author states that the genus Castilleia is named for "Castillio, Juan (1744-1793)" apparently confusing Castillejo with Juan Diego del Castillo
  4. ^ Puerto Sarmiento, Francisco Javier (2007). "Jardines de aclimatación en la España de la ilustración". Ciencias (in Spanish). 68 (October-December 2007): 30–55. Retrieved 2 November 2014. p. 33
  5. ^ Colmeiro, Miguel (1858). La Botánica y Los Botánicos de la Península Hispano-Lusitana: Estudios bibliográficos y biográficos. M. Rivadeneyra. p. 188.