Martin Lister (1639-1712), who served as physician to Queen Anne, was a prominent Fellow of the Royal Society (F.R.S.), and he was made an honorary M.D. by Oxford in 1684.The first scientific arachnologist and conchologist, and a major benefactor of the Ashmolean Museum, he corresponded regularly on natural history and medicine with its first and second keepers, Robert Plot (1640-1696) and Edward Lhwyd (1660-1709). Lister's unpublished papers were among the largest of his donations to Oxford's fledgling museum of science. In the mid-nineteenth century, these collections passed from the Ashmolean to the Bodleian Library. They contain the bulk of his correspondence, though sizeable quantities of his outgoing letters are held elsewhere, chiefly in the Royal Society, the Natural History Museum and the British Library's collection of Sloane Manuscripts. This volume is a critical edition of this correspondence from 1678 to 1694, encompassing the years he established a medical practice in London and completed his major works on conchology.
Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
Calendar of the Lister Correspondence
Section 1
- Introduction
- An Introduction to the Letters (1678–1694)
- A Thematic Overview of the Letters of the Second Volume
- Stylistic Considerations
Section 2
- The Lister Correspondence (1678–1694)
Bibliography
Index
Anna Marie Roos, Ph.D. (1997), is Emeritus Professor of the History of Science and Medicine at the University of Lincoln. A fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London and the Linnean Society, she is author and editor of several monographs and editions concerning the history of the early Royal Society, the history of chemistry, and the history of natural history.