The first edition of the
ICNCP, which was agreed in 1952 in
Wageningen and published in 1953, has been followed by seven subsequent editions – in 1958 (
Utrecht), 1961 (update of 1958), 1969 (
Edinburgh), 1980 (
Seattle), 1995 (
Edinburgh), 2004 (
Toronto) and 2009 (
Wageningen). The ninth (most recent) edition was published in 2016 (
Beijing).
William Stearn has outlined the origins of
ICNCP, tracing it back to the International Horticultural Congress of Brussels in 1864, when a letter from
Alphonse de Candolle to
Edouard Morren was tabled. This set out de Candolle's view that Latin names should be reserved for species and varieties found in the wild, with non-Latin or "fancy" names used for garden forms.
Karl Koch supported this position at the 1865 International Botanical and Horticultural Congress and at the 1866 International Botanical Congress, where he suggested that future congresses should deal with nomenclatural matters. De Candolle, who had a legal background, drew up the (rules of botanical nomenclature). When adopted by the International Botanical Congress of Paris in 1867, this became the first version of today's
International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants (
ICN). Article 40 of the dealt with the names of plants of horticultural origin: Among cultivated plants, seedlings, crosses [] of uncertain origin and sports, receive fancy names in common language, as distinct as possible from the Latin names of species or varieties. When they can be traced back to a botanical species, subspecies or variety, this is indicated by a sequence of names (Pelargonium zonale
Mistress-Pollock). This Article survived redrafting of the
International Rules of Botanical Nomenclature until 1935 and its core sentiments remain in the present-day
ICNCP of 2009. The first version (1953) was published by the Royal Horticultural Society as a 29-page booklet, edited by
William Stearn. Following the structure of the
Botanical Code, the
ICNCP is set out in the form of an initial set of Principles followed by Rules and Recommendations that are subdivided into Articles. Amendments to the
ICNCP are prompted by international symposia for cultivated plant taxonomy which allow for rulings made by the International Commission on the Nomenclature of Cultivated Plants. Each new version includes a summary of the changes made to the previous version; the changes have also been summarised for the period 1953 to 1995. ==Name examples==