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Charles Jacques Édouard Morren (1833 - 1886), was a Belgian botanist, professor of botany and director of the Jardin botanique de l'Université de Liège from 1857-1886. His special field of study was the Bromeliaceae on which family he was the recognised authority. He was the son of Charles François Antoine Morren. He was editor of the journal ‘La Belgique Horticole’ in which he published descriptions of numerous new species. He was working on a monograph of the Bromeliaceae when death intervened at a relatively youthful 53 years. His manuscripts and commissioned watercolour plates were sold to Kew Gardens by his widow shortly after his death and examined by John Gilbert Baker and Carl Christian Mez, who described numerous unpublished new species. Baker made extensive use of these paintings in the preparation of his ‘Handbook of the Bromeliaceae’ which was published in 1889. Morren employed four artists to work on the plates - Marie Jean Guillaume Cambresier[1], R. Sartorius, Francois Stroobant (1819-1916) and François De Tollenaere. Their style later heavily influenced Margaret Mee's paintings. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation E.Morren when citing a botanical name.[2] Notes ^ Jean et Joseph Cambresier, petits maîtres, liégeois de talent ^ Brummitt, R. K.; C. E. Powell (1992). Authors of Plant Names. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. ISBN 1-84246-085-4.  Persondata Name Morren, Charles Jacques Edouard Alternative names Short description Date of birth 1833 Place of birth Date of death 1886 Place of death This article about an Belgian botanist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.v · d · e