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This volume is the last in a six volume collection that brings together primary sources on gardens and gardening across the long nineteenth-century.
This six volume collection brings together primary sources on gardens and gardening across the long nineteenth-century. Economic expansion, empire, the growth of the middle classes and suburbia, the changing role of women and the professionalisation of gardening, alongside industrialisation and the development of leisure and mass markets were all elements that contributed to and were influenced by the evolution of gardens. It is a subject that is both global and multidisciplinary and this set provides the reader with a variety of ways in which to read gardens - through recognition of how they were conceived and experienced as they developed. Material is primarily derived from Britain, with Europe, USA, Australia, India, China and Japan also featuring, and sources include the gardening press, the broader press, government papers, book excerpts and some previously unpublished material.
Auteur
Dr Sarah Dewis followed a career in graphic design at the BBC and completed her doctorate at Birkbeck University of London. She contributed to The Lure of Illustration in Nineteenth Centiury Picture and Press (2009) and to the Dictionary of Nineteenth Century Journalism in Great Britain and Ireland (2009). She has lectured at the Institute of Historical Research (2014) and is the author of The Loudons and the Gardening Press (2014).
Dr Brent Elliott was Librarian of the Royal Horticultural Society from 1982 to 2007, and since 2007 has been the Society's Historian. He is the author of Victorian Gardens (1986), Treasures of the Royal Horticultural Society (1994), The Country House Garden (1995), Flora: an Illustrated History of the Garden Flower (2001), The Royal Horticultural Society: a History 1804-2004 (2004), and most recently, RHS Chelsea Flower Show: a Centenary Celebration (2013). A former editor of Garden History, he is currently editor of Occasional Papers from the RHS Lindley Library. He is a member of the Victorian Society's Buildings Committee, and for 25 years was a member of the Historic Parks and Gardens Committee/Panel of English Heritage.
Texte du rabat
This volume is the last in a six volume collection that brings together primary sources on gardens and gardening across the long nineteenth-century.
Contenu
Volume 6 - The Art of the Gardener
Acknowledgments
General Introduction
Introduction to volume 6
Part 1. The Flower Garden
a) The Development of the Parterre
Maria Jackson, Florist's Manual (1816), pp. 1-20
John Claudius Loudon, appendix to Henry Groom, 'Description of a Tulip Case', Gardener's Magazine, vol. 2, pp. 309-312
Hermann Graf von Pückler-Muskau, Introduction to section 2 Andeutungen über Landschaftsgärtnerei (1834) [transl. 2014 as Hints on Landscape Gardening, pp. 90-93, English trans]
Donald Beaton, 'Spring Flowers and Bedding Plants', Cottage Gardener, vol. 18 (1857), pp. 129
William Robinson, Alpine Flowers for English Gardens (1870), pp. 38-42
Eugène Abel Carrière, 'Mosaiculture au Chateau du Val', Revue Horticole, 1878, pp. 450-451; 'Mosaiculture à l'Exposition Universelle', ibid., pp. 465-468
George Eyles, 'Bedding vs Herbaceous Plants', Florist & Pomologist (1883), pp. 49-50
William Robinson et al., 'Bedding Out', The Garden, vol. 2 (1872), pp. 265, 406-410, 503-505, 551
Forbes Watson, 'Faults in Gardening', Flowers and Gardens (1872), pp. 119-122, 128-130, 134, 136-142
William Wildsmith, 'Summer Bedding', The English Flower Garden (1883), pp. xcv-xcvi, xcviii-cv
Benjamin Disraeli, extract from Lothair (1870), pp. 480-483
b) The Fower Garden: Bedding Schemes and Colour Theory
John Caie, 'On a Proper Arrangement of Plants', Gardener's Magazine, vol. 13 (1837), pp. 301-304; 'On Grouping Flower-beds', Florist's Journal, vol. 2 (1841), pp. 289-290
Donald Beaton, 'Arrangement of Flower-beds', Cottage Gardener, vol. 4 (1850), p. 76; 'Combination of Colours', ibid., p. 19; 'Bedding-out Plants', vol. 10 (1853), pp. 20-22; 'Hampton Court Gardens: Arrangement of Colours in Bedding', vol. 21 (1859), pp. 17-19
Michel Eugène Chevreul, 'On the Art of Arranging Ornamental Plants in Gardens', De la Loi du Contrast Simultané des Couleurs (1839) [Engl. transl. as The Principles of Harmony and Contrast of Colours, 1854], pp. 288-294
Gardner Wilkinson, extract from On Colour (1858), pp. 58, 59-60, 74-75.
[Andrew Murray], 'Ribbon Beds versus Gardens', Gardeners' Chronicle (1862), pp. 1218-1219
David Taylor Fish, 'Bedding Out', Gardeners' Chronicle (1873), pp. 611-612
c) The Flower Garden Outside the Parterre
Charles M'Intosh, extract from The Book of the Garden (1855), vol. 1, pp. 655-660
Shirley Hibberd, extract from The Amateur's Rose Book (1885), pp. 36-44, 148-149
Donald Beaton, 'Lists of Plants: Mixed Borders', Cottage Gardener, vol. 10 (1852), pp. 59-60; 'The Systematic Arrangement of Mixed Borders', Cottage Gardener, vol. 15 (1855), pp. 214-215
William Robinson, Hardy Flowers (1871), pp. 1-7
Gertrude Jekyll, 'Colour in the Flower Garden', The Garden, vol. 22 (1882), p. 177; with correspondence, pp. 470-471
Gertrude Jekyll and Henry Selfe-Leonard, 'Hardy-plant Borders', Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society, vol. 21 (1897), pp. 433-435
Part 4. The Rockery and Rock Garden
J. C. Loudon's Description of Hoole House, Gardener's Magazine, vol. 14 (1838), pp. 353-363
J. H. C., 'A Sketch of the Duke of Devonshire's Gardens at Chatsworth', Cottage Gardener, vol. 17 (1857), 427; Anon., 'Chatsworth', The Garden, vol. 5 (1874), p. 26; D. G. Mitchell, 'Rockwork at Chatsworth', The Garden, vol. 1 (1871), p. 50
M. Denis, 'L'Alcazar de Lyon', Belgique Horticole, vol. 3 (1853), pp. 331-333
James Pulham, 'Stratified Rockwork', Journal of Horticulture, vol. 30 (1876), p. 137
William Robinson, extract from Alpine Flowers for English Gardens (1870), pp. 1-7, 32-36; extract from The English Flower Garden, 4th ed. (1895), pp. 155-156
Part 5. The Pleasure Ground and Woods
John Claudius Loudon, extract from Suburban Gardener and Villa Companion (1838), pp. 525-529
Hermann Graf von Pückler-Muskau, 'Transplanting and Grouping of Larger Trees and Planting in General', Andeutungen über Landschaftsgärtnerei (1834) [transl. 2014 as Hints on Landscape Gardening pp. 51-62]
Andrew Jackson Downing, 'A Few Hints on Landscape Gardening', from Rural Essays (1853), pp. 119-122
Robert Glendinning, 'On the Introduction of New Coniferous Trees in Park Scenery', Journal of the Horticultural Society of London, vol. 5 (1850), pp. 173-17533. William Barron, extract from The British Winter Garden (1852), pp. 9-15
William Paul, extract from Hand-Book of Villa Gardening (1855), pp. 17-19
Alphonse Alphand, extract from Les Promenades de Paris (1867-73), I, pp. li-lvii
Robert Glendinning, 'Elvaston Castle, the Seat of the Earl of Harrington', Gardeners' Chronicle (1849), p. 773, 789
Edward Kemp, 'Biddulph Grange, the Residence of James Bateman, Esq.', Gardeners' Chronicle (1856), pp. 727-728
Charles W. Quin, 'The Horticultural Comprachicos of Japan at the Paris Exhibition', The Garden, vol. 14 (1878), pp. 174-175
William Robinson, extract from the The Wild Garden, 3rd ed. (1883), pp. 1-8, vii-viii
William Paul, 'On Colour in the Tree Scenery of our Gardens, Parks, and Pleasure Grounds' (1870), from his Contributions to Horticultural Literature (1896), pp. 456-461
Alexander McKenzie, extract from 'The Amateur's Arboretum', Floral World (1875), pp. 321-323
Anon., 'Waddesdon'…