-
invented by Carl Linnaeus.
Antonio José
Cavanilles was born on
January 16, 1745, in Valencia, Spain. In his
youth Cavanilles specialized in the
study of mathematics...
- City, sent "plant parts" to Abbe
Antonio José
Cavanilles,
director of the
Royal Gardens of Madrid.
Cavanilles flowered one
plant that same year, then the...
- The
Cavanilles Institute (Valencia) is
located on the
Parque Científico de Paterna, and was
established in 1998 by the
University of Valencia. The goal...
- Pope
Callixtus III (Italian:
Callisto III, Valencian:
Calixt III, Spanish:
Calixto III; 31
December 1378 – 6
August 1458), born
Alfonso de
Borgia (Valencian:...
- and four girls:
Alfons de
Borja i
Cavanilles, who
later became the
first Borgia pope.
Isabel de
Borja i
Cavanilles, who
later married her
distant cousin...
-
Historia Biografía: Ramón
Iribarren Cavanilles" [Royal
Academy of
History Biography: Ramón
Iribarren Cavanilles] (in Spanish).
Retrieved 5
December 2022...
-
March 1437) and his
Aragonese wife and
distant cousin Isabel de
Borja y
Cavanilles (died 19
October 1468),
daughter of Juan
Domingo de
Borja y Doncel. He...
- was
introduced to
Europe in the
sixteenth century and
formally named by
Cavanilles. The
original wild D.
pinnata is
presumed extinct. It is geographically...
- in Lamarck's Encyclopédie Méthodique,
Botanique in 1810.
Cavanilles,
Antonio Josef Cavanilles (1802).
Descripcion de las
Plantas (in Spanish). Madrid:...
-
University Press. ISBN 0-521-04656-4
Flora of China,
Galinsoga parviflora Cavanilles, 1795. 牛膝菊 niu xi ju Stace, C.A. (2019). New
Flora of the
British Isles...