Carl Traugott Beilschmied

German botanist and pharmacist (1793–1848).

Carl Traugott Beilschmied (19 October 1793 in Langenöls – 6 May 1848 in Herrnstadt) was a German pharmacist and botanist, known for his research in phytogeography. Prior to 1820, he trained and worked in pharmacies in Beuthen, Breslau and Berlin. He then studied at the University of Bonn, where he came under the influence of Christian Gottfried Daniel Nees von Esenbeck. In 1822 he began work as a provisor at a pharmacy in Ohlau, becoming its manager in 1826. In 1837 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Breslau, and during the following year, became a member of the Deutsche

Abbreviations: Beilschm.
Occupations: pharmacist, botanist, botanical collector
Citizenships: Kingdom of Prussia
Languages: Latin
Dates: 1793-10-19T00:00:00Z – 1848-05-06T00:00:00Z
Birth place: Olszyna
Direct attributions: 16 plants, 0 fungi
Authorship mentions: 16 plants, 0 fungi

16 plants attributed to16 plants:

Sterculioideae (Tropical Chestnuts) Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the malvaceae family
Sterculioideae is a subfamily of the family Malvaceae containing evergreen and deciduous tree and shrub genera, that were previously placed in the obsolete family Sterculiaceae.
Chloridoideae Kunth ex Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the poaceae family
Chloridoideae is one of the largest subfamilies of grasses, with roughly 150 genera and 1,600 species, mainly found in arid tropical or subtropical grasslands. Within the PACMAD clade, their sister group is the Danthonioideae. The subfamily includes widespread weeds such as Bermuda grass (Cynodon dactylon), goosegrass (Eleusine indica) or finger grass (Chloris), but also millet species grown in some tropical regions, namely finger millet (Eleusine coracana) and teff (Eragrostis tef). With the exception of some species in Ellisochloa and Eleusine indica, most of the subfamily's species use the
Calamoideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the arecaceae family
Calamoideae is a subfamily of flowering plant in the palm family found throughout Central America, South America, Africa, India, China, Southeast Asia and Australia. It is represented by 21 genera - containing nearly a quarter of all species in the palm family - including the largest genus, Calamus, the type genus of the group. Only four are found in the New World while the rest are Old World denizens, usually found in equatorial swampland or along tropical coastlines. While the many species show marked differences, the bracts of all orders are tubular, the flowers are almost always borne in
Crotonoideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the euphorbiaceae family
The Crotonoideae (crotonoids) is a subfamily within the family Euphorbiaceae. This subfamily contains many plants with purgative properties, such as Croton tiglium and Jatropha curcas.
Acalyphoideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the euphorbiaceae family
The Acalyphoideae are a subfamily within the family Euphorbiaceae with 116 genera in 20 tribes.
Euphorbioideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the euphorbiaceae family
The Euphorbioideae are a subfamily within the family Euphorbiaceae.
Cordioideae (Cordiaceae) Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the boraginaceae family
Cordiaceae is a family in the flowering plant order Boraginales. It has also been treated as the subfamily Cordioideae of a broadly circumscribed family Boraginaceae s.l., but in 2016 the Boraginales Working Group recommended treating it as the separate family Cordiaceae. This treatment is accepted by World Flora Online as of December 2025, but not by Plants of the World Online which places its genera in Boraginaceae.
Dombeyoideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the malvaceae family
Dombeyoideae is a widely distributed subfamily of the Malvaceae, as proposed by the APG. Most of the plants placed here were once assembled with more or less related genera in the paraphyletic Sterculiaceae; a lesser number were placed in the Tiliaceae which were also not monophyletic. The Dombeyoideae were originally described by Carl Beilschmied in 1833. In the present delimitation, they contain about 14 genera with about 380 species, some 60% of which are in Dombeya (one of the most speciose genera of Malvaceae). They grow in the Old World tropics, especially Madagascar and the Mascarenes
Cyperoideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the cyperaceae family
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Lecythidoideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the lecythidaceae family
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Combretoideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the combretaceae family
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Violoideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the violaceae family
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Barringtonioideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the lecythidaceae family
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Cunonioideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the cunoniaceae family
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Buxoideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the buxaceae family
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Bixoideae Beilschm. 1833
plant subfamily in the bixaceae family
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