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← 2014 Advent Botany – Day 24 – The Brussels Sprout (Brassica oleracea var. gemmifera)
Can the Iberian Floristic Diversity Withstand Near-Future Climate Change? →

2014 Advent Botany – Christmas Day – The Star of Bethlehem from GOD

Posted on December 25, 2014 by Alastair Culham
Edward Burne-Jones, Star of Bethlehem

Edward Burne-Jones, Star of Bethlehem

The Star of Bethlehem guided the Magi from the east to the stable in which Jesus lay.  This classic part of the Christmas story has given rise to the star on the tops of Christmas trees but also to much astronomical debate on what the star actually was.  For a longer discussion of the various theories try the whychristmas web pages.  Ideas for the nature of the star vary from a comet, through the conjunction of planet Earth with Jupiter and Saturn to a Super Nova.

Ornithogalum_umbellatum_close-up2

Star of Bethlehem (Ornithogalum umbellatum)

However the story today is not about that Star of Bethlehem or even that God.  It starts with an email from me, the Curator of RNG, the University of Reading Herbarium to one of our MSc Plant Diversity graduates, Andrew Doran, now Assistant Director for Collections, University & Jepson Herbaria, University of California, Berkeley, U.S.A.. Andrew is an alumnus of the University of Reading, but he is also an alumnus of Charterhouse School in Godalming, Surrey.  Charterhouse School has a herbarium which Andrew has in safe keeping and is gradually digitising.  The collection is of real historical and botanical interest but perhaps is most notable for its acronym.  Every recognized herbarium has an acronym and they are listed in Index Herbariorum, maintained at New York Botanical Garden.  Ours is RNG, while just down the road Kew has K and the Natural History Museum has BM.  The special thing about Charterhouse is a byproduct of it’s home town, Godalming; Charterhouse Herbarium has the acronym GOD.

God1000specimenAmong the specimens of GOD is one of Ornithogalum umbellatum, it is specimen GOD1000 and you can see it in the illustration here, or in more detail via the e-loan link. So here, really is, the Star of Bethlehem from GOD. A diminutive white flowered bulbous plant widely grown in gardens and native to southern and central Europe.

Happy Christmas!

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About Alastair Culham

A professional botanist and biologist with an interest in promoting biological knowledge and awareness to all.
View all posts by Alastair Culham →
This entry was posted in Advent, Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science and tagged #AdventBotany, Andrew Doran, Charterhouse School, GOD herbarium. Bookmark the permalink.
← 2014 Advent Botany – Day 24 – The Brussels Sprout (Brassica oleracea var. gemmifera)
Can the Iberian Floristic Diversity Withstand Near-Future Climate Change? →
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Last reply was December 25, 2017
  1. #Advent Botany – the full story! | Dr M Goes Wild
    View December 25, 2014

    […] Dr M’s colleague Alastair Culham has prepared a typically informative and left of field post on the Star of  Bethlehem from GOD for this Christmas Day, it is and it is not what you might expect! Read all about it at Culham Research Group here. […]

    Reply
  2. Getting Ready for #AdventBotany – here’s a reprise of 2014 | Culham Research Group
    View December 3, 2015

    […] from a UK supermarket providing Christmas colour. Day 24 – Brussels sprout Day 25 – Star of […]

    Reply
  3. #AdventBotany Christmas Day: A rose with no thorns; eyes without sight | Culham Research Group
    View December 25, 2017

    […] 100th #AdventBotany blog and the fourth for Christmas day.  The first Christmas blog featured the Star of Bethlehem, the second, Christmas Cactus, and the third, a tough and Christmas flowering heather.  This is […]

    Reply
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