Sherard was born in Bushby,
Leicestershire and studied at
St John's College, Oxford, from 1677 to 1683. He studied botany from 1686 to 1688 in
Paris under
Joseph Pitton de Tournefort and was a friend and pupil of
Paul Hermann in
Leyden from 1688 to 1689 who also studied with Tournefort at this time. In 1690 he was in
Ireland as tutor to the family of Sir Arthur Rawdon at Moira, County Down. Sherard was British Consul at
Smyrna from 1703 to 1716, during which time he accumulated a fortune. When he returned to England he became a patron of other naturalists, including
Johann Jacob Dillenius,
Pietro Antonio Micheli,
Paolo Boccone and
Mark Catesby. He was also instrumental in the publication of
Sebastien Vaillant's
Botanicon parisiense (1727) and Hermann's Musaeum zeylanica. With his money, he endowed the Chair of
Botany at
Oxford University with the stipulation that it go to Dillenius. On his death James Sherard was left in charge of executing William's will. He successfully negotiated his brother's endowment of the
Sherardian Professorship of Botany at the
University of Oxford; following the terms of the will, Dillenius was named the first Sherardian Professor. For his work in endowing the professorship, Sherard was granted a doctorate in medicine by the university in 1731. ==Works==