Jean Robin (botanist)


Jean Robin, was a French herbalist.

Biography

Robin was the gardener of the French kings Henry III, Henry IV, and Louis XIII. He was described as "simplicist" or "arborist". In 1601, he sowed the first Robinia introduced in Europe, either in his garden, which is now the place Dauphine, or in the garden of the School of Medicine, which included the current square René-Viviani. According to other sources, Robin sowed a Robinia in each of these two gardens. In 1636, his son Vespasien Robin planted another specimen of Robinia in the King's Garden, now the Jardin des plantes de Paris, where it still stands.
Robin published several books, the first one in 1601 was a catalog of the 1,300 native and exotic species he cultivated.
Robin was responsible for several gardens, including the one that Catherine de' Medici created for the Tuileries Palace. The small flower garden of the School of Medicine was also entrusted to him from its creation in 1597. This garden closed in 1617.
J. Robin had brought many seeds and onions of exotic plants from Holland, which he refused to share. When the Royal Garden of Medicinal Plants was created in 1626, Guy de La Brosse made Vespasien Robin his sub-demonstrator: he thus obtained that Vespasien's father gave to the garden "more than twelve hundred species, which formed the first stock of the School of Botany "

Books published

Catalogus stirpium tam indigenarum quam exoticarum qua Lutetiae coluntur, Paris, 1601Le jardin du roy très chrétien Henry IV, roy de France et de Navarre, dédié à La Royne, 1608Histoire de plantes aromatiques augmentée de plusieurs plantes venues des Indes lesquelles ont été prises & cultivées au Jardin de M. Robin, arboriste du Roi, Paris, Macé, 1619, in-16, 16 pages.The garden of King Louis XIII , 1623Enchiridion isagogicum ad facilem notitiam Stirpium tam indigenarum quam exoticarum qua coluntur in horto D.D. Joannis. & Vespasiani Robin (=Manual for easy identification of the local and exotic plants growing in the gardens of Jean et Vesapasien Robin, Paris, P. de Bresche, 1624, in-12, 71 pages.