David de Gorter

Dutch botanist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroDutch botanist
A.K.A.Gorter
A.K.A.Gorter
PlacesNetherlands
wasScientist Botanist Writer Educator
Work fieldAcademia Literature Science
Gender
Male
Birth30 April 1717, Enkhuizen
Death8 April 1783Zutphen (aged 65 years)
Star signTaurus
The details

Biography

David de Gorter (1717–1783) was a Dutch physician and botanist.
He was professor at the University of Harderwijk and royal physician to Empress Elizabeth of Russia. He was a member of Imperial Academy of Sciences in St Petersburg, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and other academies and learned societies.
At Harderwijk, he made friends with the young Carolus Linnaeus, who came there to obtain his doctorate degree. Later, Linnaeus named the plant genus Gorteria after David de Gorter and his father, the physician Johannes de Gorter. In St Petersburg, de Gorter edited and published Krasheninnikov's last work, Flora Ingrica. He authored one of the first floras to use binomial nomenclature, Flora Belgica from 1767.
On May 21, 1775 he married Mary Elizabeth Schultz, a friend of Betje Wolff. After his death, she donated his herbarium to the Academy in Harderwijk. It now is kept at the National Herbarium of the Netherlands.
De Gorter spent his last years in Zutphen, where he wrote his Flora of the Seven Provinces.
The Dutch botanical journal 'Gorteria is named to his honour.

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