A critical biography of an influential seventeenth-century Welsh
intellectual.
Edward Lhwyd, an illegitimate son of a father ruined by the English
Civil War, made his own way in the world, finally laying the foundation
for modern Celtic studies. A competent botanist as a child, he spent his
collegiate days at Oxford University in the Botanical Garden before
being appointed the second keeper of the newly established Ashmolean
Museum. This biography traces the development of his wide-ranging
research interests beginning with botany and paleontology and leading
into antiquarian studies and Celtic languages. Developing his own
scientific method based on naturalistic observation, Lhwyd left an
indelible mark on the history of science.