Michelangelo Tilli or Michele Angelo TilliFRS (8 August 1655 – 13 March 1740) was an Italian physician and botanist, noted for his publication of Catalogus Plantarum Horti Pisani (Florence 1723).[1]
He became professor of botany at Pisa in 1685 and also director of the Botanical Garden of Pisa, introducing plants from Asia and Africa. He was among the first in Italy to use greenhouses for plants, making it possible to cultivate pineapples and coffee in Italy. Carl Linnaeus praised Pisa's botanical garden as one of the finest in Europe.[2]Cosimo III was an enthusiastic supporter of the garden, arranging for the importation of plants from as far afield as the Americas.
Nomi Pesciolini, Ugo (1911). "Per la biografia di uno scienziato e viaggiatore valdelsano. Michelangelo Tilli". Miscellanea Storica della Valdelsa. XIX: 1–21.
Neviani, Antonio (1940). "Una lettera del conte Luigi Ferdinando Marsili al professor Michelangelo Tilli". Rivista di storia di scienze mediche e naturali. XXXI: 83–87.
Cochrane, Eric W. (1961). Tradition and enlightenment in the Tuscan academies, 1690-1800. Rome. pp. 130–132.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Boas Hall, Marie (1984). "La scienza italiana vista dalla Royal Society". Scienza e Letteratura Nella Cultura Italiana del Settecento. Bologna: 52–60.
Tongiorgi Tomasi, Lucia; Garbari, Fabio; Tosi, Alessandro (1991). Giardino dei semplici: l'orto botanico di Pisa dal XVI al XX secolo. Pisa. pp. 65–67, 69 f.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Arrigoni, Tiziano (1992). "Lo studio della botanica nella Toscana del Settecento". Museologia Scientifica. IX: 386, 388, 394.