Description
Peruvian Bark provides a detailed historical narrative of one of the most significant botanical expeditions of the nineteenth century. Clements R. Markham chronicles the ambitious British effort to cultivate chinchona trees in India, breaking the South American monopoly on this invaluable source of quinine.
The book explores the scientific, political, and logistical challenges faced in transplanting these rare trees from the Peruvian Andes to the Indian subcontinent. Markham’s account reveals the determination of explorers, botanists, and administrators who worked tirelessly to establish productive plantations across British India’s diverse climates and terrains.
This work serves as both a historical document and a testament to Victorian-era botanical science and imperial ambition. It demonstrates how the successful cultivation of chinchona fundamentally changed medicine, making quinine widely available and affordable for treating malaria across the British Empire and beyond.







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