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  1. Hieronymus Bock (Latinised Hieronymus Tragus; c. 1498 – 21 February 1554) was a German botanist, physician, and Lutheran minister who began the transition from medieval botany to the modern scientific worldview by arranging plants by their relation or resemblance.

  2. Apr 17, 2024 · Hieronymus Bock (born 1498, Heidersbach, Germany—died February 21, 1554, Hornbach) was a German priest, physician, and botanist who helped lead the transition from the philological scholasticism of medieval botany to the modern science based on observation and description from nature.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Hieronymus Bock was born in Heidelsheim or Heidersbach, Germany in 1498. His parents intended for him to become a monk, however he became a schoolmaster instead. He later managed the gardens for Count Palatine Ludwig in Zweibrucken from 1523 to 1533.

  4. Feb 24, 2011 · Hieronymus Bock (1498-1554) Bock (Latinized Tragus) was a German botanist, physician, and churchman. He began the transition from medieval botany to the modern scientific worldview by arranging plants by their resemblance or apparent relationship. The details of his life are sketchy.

  5. Feb 21, 2017 · Hieronymus Bock, a German physician and botanist, died Feb. 21, 1554, at age 55. Bock was one of the three great German Renaissance botanists who transformed botany from a set of second-hand commentaries on ancient texts to an original field science supported by...

  6. In Hieronymus Bock Bock’s major work, the New Kreuterbuch (1539), broke from the past by providing detailed descriptions and (in the 1546 edition) careful illustrations of approximately 700 plants, which he classified on the basis of structural similarity.

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  8. Bock (also known as Hieronymus Tragus) was one of the three “German fathers of botany.” Along with Otto Brunfels and Leonhard Fuchs, he represented the transition from late medieval botany, with its philological scholasticism, to early modern botany, with its demand that descriptions and illustrations be derived from nature.