Martin Richard Flor (1772 â 24 February 1820) was a DanishâÂÂborn Norwegian botanist, schoolmaster and land economist whose works laid the foundations for botanical study in Norway. From 1800 he taught natural history at the Oslo Cathedral School and, from 1817, lectured in botany at the University of Christiania (now the University of Oslo). In that same year he published two complementary florasâÂÂthe systematic Ledetraad and the school flora Systematisk CharacteristikâÂÂfollowed in 1819 by Lægedomsplanter, the first Norwegian textbook on medicinal plants for students.
Martin Richard Flor was born in 1772 on the island of TÃÂ¥singe in Denmark. In 1790 he completed his studies at Odense Latin School and proceeded to the University of Copenhagen, where he passed the examen philosophicum. He furthered his training at the private Naturhistorieselskabet in Copenhagen, attending the lectures of the distinguished botanist Martin Vahl, whose teaching shaped Flor's lifelong botanical interests. Many contemporariesâÂÂsuch as Christen Smith and Jens HornemannâÂÂalso studied at the same institute, marking it as a centre for Scandinavian naturalists.
Soon after graduation, Flor was selected for a newly created post in natural history at Christiania Cathedral School (now the Oslo Cathedral School), becoming NorwayâÂÂs first dedicated naturalâÂÂscience teacher. He later taught at the Military Academy, helped establish the Christiania Burgher School and conducted popular Sunday school classes. A staunch advocate of handsâÂÂon learning, he led numerous botanical excursionsâÂÂoften held on SundaysâÂÂmuch to the displeasure of some colleagues and ecclesiastical authorities. In 1806 Flor took charge of the Paléhagen garden at Bjørvika, bequeathed to the school by chamberlain Bernt Anker, and maintained it as Norway's first public botanical garden (and the countryâÂÂs first school garden) until the state assumed control in 1815. Throughout this period he collaborated with friends such as Christen Smith and Jens Wilken Hornemann, sowing some 258 species in 1813 alone. In April 1813 he received from forestâÂÂinspector Nicolai Hersleb Ramm a detailed account of NorwayâÂÂs first known lithopedion (a tenâÂÂyear 'stone baby') from Kvikne, which Flor preserved in his papers.
In 1817 Flor issued two floras: Systematisk Characteristik, a detailed local flora for pupils of the Cathedral School, and Ledetraad for Begyndere, a more widely aimed determination flora that incorporated Linnaean taxonomy as an integral framework. The following year he published , which treated the medicinal plants of Class XXIV in Linnaeus's system and stands as Norway's first student text on medical botany. These works drew heavily on sources such as Frederik Christian Kielsen's DanishâÂÂarea flora, the later volumes of Flora Danica, Johan Wilhelm Palmstruch and Olof Swartz's Svensk botanik, and Christian Schkuhr's Riedgräsern.
Flor's health declined in the late 1810s amid what contemporary letters describe as a "weakening of mental faculties", and he died on 24 February 1820. His gravestone on VÃÂ¥r Frelsers gravlund in Oslo commemorates his roles as (senior teacher) and (lecturer) in the botanical gardens at Tøyen. Although later critics dismissed him as an amateur, modern scholarship recognises Flor primarily as an innovative educator, populariser and landâÂÂeconomist whose floristics work provided the basis upon which successors such as Matthias Numsen Blytt and built Norway's botanical tradition. His portrait, alongside those of Carl Linnaeus and Martin Vahl, hangs in the Natural History Museum in Oslo.