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Tag the species in these 17th century drawings of animals, plants, mushrooms and shells made by Anselmus de Boodt, from the Rijksmuseum.
# | Contributor | Contributions |
---|---|---|
1 | Anneke R. Jonker | 37 |
2 | Lucelshout | 30 |
3 | Mikeybon | 19 |
4 | Jetje27 | 13 |
5 | Ptheijne | 12 |
6 | ArnoldaW | 12 |
7 | Ahospers | 8 |
8 | Spinster | 7 |
9 | K.vliet | 7 |
10 | AnnikaHendriksen | 6 |
11 | AHendriksen-collecti | 5 |
12 | JanVermeer69 | 5 |
13 | Marcelpolling | 5 |
14 | Timmienathor | 4 |
15 | Wimw | 4 |
16 | McFire | 3 |
17 | GielvdLinden | 3 |
18 | DanielleJWiki | 3 |
19 | RickBuesink | 2 |
20 | Спасимир | 2 |
21 | SFauconnier | 2 |
22 | Werner de Gier | 2 |
23 | S. Pieterse | 1 |
24 | Sir Iain | 1 |
25 | Luc.willemse | 1 |
26 | Bart Braun | 1 |
Anselmus De Boodt (1550-1632), personal physician to Emperor Rudolf II, was commissioned by the emperor to make the work 'Historia Naturalis'; twelve albums with more than 750 watercolors of animals, plants and shells made and collected between 1596 and 1610. Since 2017 these albums are on long term loan in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. Recognize the plants, animals, mushroom and shells in the drawings and help adding structured data! But beware: De Boodt also drew non-existent animals, such as dragons! We would like to use structured data on Wikimedia Commons (SDoC) to indicate exactly what species each unique image represents (= 'depicts’). Help add the specific species to the drawings! The Latin names are often mentioned on the drawing or in the title. Multiple species can also be linked to one drawing. Enjoy!