Adam Buddle
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:EngvarB Script error: No such module "Template wrapper".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters". Adam Buddle (1662 – 15 April 1715) was an English clergyman and botanist. Born at Deeping St James, a village near Peterborough, Buddle was educated at Woodbridge School and St Catharine's College, Cambridge,[1] where he gained a BA in 1681, and a MA four years later. He was a Fellow from 1686 until 1691 when he was ejected as a non-juror but he later conformed.[1]
Buddle was ordained as a deacon in 1685 and priest of the Church of England in December 1702,[2] obtaining a living at North Fambridge, near Maldon, Essex, in 1703. He was also a reader at Gray's Inn under the patronage of Robert Moss.[3] His life between graduation and ordination remains obscure, although it is known he lived in or around Hadleigh, Suffolk, that he established a reputation as an authority on bryophytes, and that he married Elizabeth Eveare in 1695, with whom he had several children.[3] Buddle compiled a new English Flora, completed in 1708, but it was never published; the original manuscript and Buddle's herbarium were preserved as part of the Sloane collection at the Natural History Museum, London.[4]
Buddle died at Gray's Inn in 1715 and was buried at the church of St Andrew, Holborn.[3]
It is popularly believed that Buddle was posthumously commemorated by Linnaeus, who named the genus Buddleja in his honour,[5] but this is not certain.[3]
<templatestyles src="Botanist/styles.css"/>The standard author abbreviation Buddle is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.[6]
References
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- 1662 births
- 1715 deaths
- People from the Deepings
- Alumni of St Catharine's College, Cambridge
- 17th-century English botanists
- 17th-century English clergy
- 18th-century English Anglican priests
- 18th-century British botanists
- English nonjuror clergy