Botanical histories of South India
Botanical histories of South India
The botanical histories of South India are as rich as its beautiful, diverse flora, predictably entwined in Empire and colonialism, local cultures and traditional medicinal practices.
As well as the plants themselves the cast of characters includes Islamic ruler warriors, Portuguese spice traders, Dutch administrators, East India Company Scottish surgeon botanists, Telagu and Tamil botanical artists, Kew horticulturalists and even Quaker quinologists. These people documented and nurtured Indian biodiversity but were also responsible for changing landscapes and environmental history: introducing plants from overseas, establishing plantations of tea, coffee, rubber, cinchona and spices. From the Malabar Coast to the heights of the Western Ghats there are many stories to tell.
Schedule
12.00pm - Welcome from Claire Baxter Cambridge Alumni Office and Jon Baines, Jon Baines Tours
12.10pm - Talk from Gina Fullerlove
12.45pm - Q&A with Gina, facilitated by Jon Baines
1.00pm - Finish
Please note, this event will be recorded.
This talk is part of the Cambridge Alumni Travel programme, and is organised by Jon Baines who will be arranging the alumni journey to South India which will be accompanied by Gina Fullerlove.
Speaker
Gina Fullerlove

Gina Fullerlove is an honorary research associate at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and a fellow of the Linnean Society. Having graduated in zoology and botany from the University of London, she undertook postgraduate studies in biological anthropology at Durham University before becoming a scientific publisher for Academic Press, Macmillan and Nature. This was followed by a nineteen-year stint as head of publishing at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, commissioning and producing award-winning books for all ages on plant science and natural history, botanical art, and environmental history. Since retirement she has worked as an honorary research associate in Kew’s Library & Archives, helping to uncover its unrivalled historic South Asian botanical art collections from East India Company times, drawn by Indian artists. In 2025, she helped with the curation of the exhibition Flora Indica at Kew, which showed East India Company commissioned illustrations, drawn by Indian botanical artists, dating from 1790 to 1850.
Booking information
Click the 'Book online' button to register your place for Gina's talk.
Booking for this event will close on Thursday 23 April 2026, 12.00pm BST.
