Philipp Wilhelm Wirtgen


Philipp Wilhelm Wirtgen was a German botanist and teacher born in Neuwied, Germany. He was the father of botanist Ferdinand Paul Wirtgen.

Teaching

He was a school teacher in Remagen, Winningen and beginning in 1831, at Koblenz, where from 1835 to 1870, he served as an instructor at the Evangelischen Höheren Stadtschule. With botanist Theodor Friedrich Ludwig Nees von Esenbeck, he was founder of the Botanischer Verein am Mittel- und Niederrhein.

Research and publications

Wirtgen specialized in the study of Rhineland flora, and his work largely dealt with phytogeography, taxonomy and floristics within the field of botany. Among his numerous publications was an 1857 book involving flora native to Rhine Province called "Flora der preußischen Rheinprovinz und der zunächst angränzenden Gegenden", and a treatise titled "Neuwied und seine Umgebung". Other noted works by Wirtgen include:Flora des Regierungsbezirks Coblenz, 1841 – Flora of the Koblenz district.Die cryptogamischen Gefässpflanzen der preussischen Rheinlande, 1847Cryptogamic vascular plants of the Prussian Rhineland.Beiträge zur rheinischen Flora, 1869 – Contribution to Rhenish flora.
He published several exsiccatae, the first starting around 1842 with Michael Bach and among others the series Herbarium plantarum criticarum, selectarum, hybridarumque florae Rhenanae.

Legacy

The plant genus Wirtgenia was named in his honor by Carl Heinrich "Bipontinus" Schultz.