Nineteenth-century gardens and gardening. Volume I, Home / edited by Sarah Dewis, and Brent Elliott.
Nineteenth-century gardens and gardening.
ISBN
9780429198809 (electronic bk.)
0429198809 (electronic bk.)
9780429581816 (electronic bk. : EPUB)
0429581815 (electronic bk. : EPUB)
9780429579592 (electronic bk. : Mobipocket)
0429579594 (electronic bk. : Mobipocket)
9780429583711 (electronic bk. : PDF)
0429583710 (electronic bk. : PDF)
9780367188566
0429198809 (electronic bk.)
9780429581816 (electronic bk. : EPUB)
0429581815 (electronic bk. : EPUB)
9780429579592 (electronic bk. : Mobipocket)
0429579594 (electronic bk. : Mobipocket)
9780429583711 (electronic bk. : PDF)
0429583710 (electronic bk. : PDF)
9780367188566
Dil Kodu
İngilizce
Yayın Bilgisi
Abingdon : Routledge [2024]
Fiziksel Niteleme
1 online resource (xxxvi, 412 pages)
İçindekiler Notu
Volume 1. HomeList of IllustrationsAcknowledgmentsGeneral IntroductionIntroduction to Volume I 'Home'Part 1. Green homesa) Domestic gardens 1. J. C. Loudon, IntroductiontoThe Suburban Gardener and Villa Companion2. Andrew Jackson Downing, Preface to A Treatise on the Theory and Practise of Landscape Gardening3. William Howitt, Favourite Pursuits of English Cottagers and Workmen4. Shirley Hibberd, Introduction toThe Town Garden5. Charles Dickens, Great Expectations (excerpt)6. Shirley Hibberd, Villa Gardening7. Gertrude Jekyll,Wood and Garden (excerpts)8. Eug©·ne Noel, 'Small Gardens'b) Kitchen and fruit gardens9. Walter Nicol,The Gardener⁰́₉s Kalendar (excerpts)10. J. C. Loudon, The Suburban Horticulturist (excerpts)11. Elizabeth Watts, Vegetables and How to Grow Them (excerpts)12. Elizabeth Watts, Orchard and Fruit Garden (excerpts)13. Gustave Flaubert, ⁰́₈Experiments in Agriculture⁰́₉14. J. Douglas, ⁰́₈Culford Hall, Suffolk⁰́₉15. Gertrude Jekyll, Wood and Garden (excerpts)16. The Gardeners⁰́₉ Magazine, The Wasted Orchards of England (excerpts)c) Greenhouses and conservatories17. J. C. Loudon, The Green-House Companion (excerpts)18. John Dillwyn Llewllyn, ⁰́₈Some Account of an Orchideous House--19. Edouard Andr©♭, ⁰́₈Conservatories in the Natural Style⁰́₉, ⁰́₈A Cool House⁰́₉20. Shirley Hibberd, The Amateur⁰́₉s Greenhouse and Conservatory (excerpts)21. Rhoda Broughton, Not Wisely, but Too Well (excerpt)22. Frances Jane Hope, ⁰́₈Sweet-scented Greenhouse Plants⁰́₉; ⁰́₈Interesting Stove Plants⁰́₉ 23. H. Harland, ⁰́₈Magic Grottoes and Show Ferneries⁰́₉d) Garden structures and ornament24. Humphry Repton, Observations on the Theory and Practise of Landscape Gardening (excerpt)25. J. C. Loudon, ⁰́₈On the Employment of Vases as Receptacles for Plants in Town Gardens⁰́Œ⁰́₉26. J. C. Loudon, ⁰́₈Descriptive Notice of the Villa of Mrs Lawrence at Drayton Green--27. Andrew Jackson Downing, ⁰́₈Embellishments; Architectural, Rustic and Floral⁰́₉28. Shirley Hibberd, ⁰́₈Garden Scenery and Ornaments⁰́₉29. Frances Jane Hope, ⁰́₈On Arbours or Bowers⁰́₉30. ⁰́₈P⁰́₉., ⁰́₉Lamport⁰́₉Part 2. Indoor gardensa) Plants under glass (and water)31. Daniel Ellis, ⁰́₈Description of a Plant-case⁰́Œ⁰́₉32. Nathaniel Bagshaw Ward, ⁰́₈On the Application of the Closed Plan in Improving the Condition of the Poor⁰́₉33. Thomas James, ⁰́₈The Flower-Garden' (a series of reviews) 34. ⁰́₈An Admirer of Plants⁰́₉, ⁰́₈On the Cultivation of Plants in the Windows of the Living Rooms'35. Donald Beaton, ⁰́₈Plants in a Bed-room⁰́₉36. E. A. Maling, Flowers and Foliage for In-door Plant Cases(excerpts) 37. John Lindley ⁰́₈The Belgian Window Garden⁰́₉38.Eduard Regel, ⁰́₈Culture of Plants in Rooms⁰́₉39. Shirley Hibberd, Rustic Adornments for Homes of Taste (excerpts)40. C. Schickler, ⁰́₈Flower Stand with Fountain Operated by Air Pressure⁰́₉41. Anon, ⁰́₈Automatic Room Fountains⁰́₉b) Decoration with plants and flowers42. J. C. Loudon, ⁰́₈Management of Town Green-houses, and of Plants in Chambers at Routs⁰́₉43. Jules Lachaume, ⁰́₈Decoration for Balls and Soir©♭es⁰́₉44. Louis Van Houtte, ⁰́₈Movable Trellis⁰́₉ 45. George M⁰́₉Ewen, ⁰́₉A Plea for Pyramidal Pelargoniums⁰́₉46. Annie Hassard, Floral Decorations for the Dwelling House (excerpts)47. John Wills, ⁰́₈Plants for House Decoration⁰́₉48. Anon, ⁰́₈A Drama in Five Acts⁰́₉49. Josiah Conder, Flowers of Japan and the Art of Floral Arrangement (excerpts)c) Floral decoration for the table 50. E. A. Maling, Flowers for Ornament, and Decoration (excerpts)51. Thomas C. March,Extracts fromFlower and Fruit Decoration (1862)52. John Lindley, Unsigned report on table decoration53. ⁰́₈H⁰́₉, ⁰́₈The Competitive Table Decorations at the Royal Botanic Gardens, by Gaslight⁰́₉54. Annie Hassard, ⁰́₈Artificial Light of Dining-Rooms⁰́₉55. John Perkins, Floral Designs for the Table (excerpts)56. Edward Luckhurst, ⁰́₈The Arrangement of Cut Flowers⁰́₉57. Shirley Hibberd, ⁰́₈A Cheap Table Decoration⁰́₉d) Language of flowers, wax modelling and leaf prints58. Henry Phillips, Floral Emblems (excerpts)59. Jules Lachaume, ⁰́₈Emblematic Language of Flowers'60. Ann Pratt and Thomas Miller, The Language of Flowers, the Association of Flowers, Popular Tales of Flowers (excerpts)61. Sarah Carter Edgarton Mayo,The Floral Fortune-Teller: a Game for the Season of Flowers (excerpts)62. Emma Peachey, The Royal Guide to Wax Flower Modelling (excerpts)63. Annie M. Williams, Wax-Flower Modelling Made Easy (excerpts)64. Edward Parrish, ⁰́₈The Leaf a Type of the Tree⁰́₉, ⁰́₉How and What to Collect⁰́₉, ⁰́₈Maceration⁰́₉, ⁰́₈Seed-vessels⁰́₉, ⁰́₈Bleaching⁰́₉, ⁰́₈Mounting the Specimens⁰́₉65. James F. Robinson, ⁰́₈Leaf Printing from Nature⁰́₉66. F. W. Burbidge, ⁰́₈How to Skeletonise Leaves and Seed-vessels for Winter Decorations⁰́₉Bibliography of SourcesList of Press SourcesBibliography of Works Cited Appendix Index
Özet, vb.
This volume is numberone of a sixvolume collection that 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 ⁰́₃ 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.
Konu
HISTORY / General __ bisacsh
HISTORY / Modern / 19th Century __ bisacsh
Gardens __ History __ 19th century.
Gardening __ History __ 19th century.
Horticulture __ History __ 19th century.
HISTORY / Modern / 19th Century __ bisacsh
Gardens __ History __ 19th century.
Gardening __ History __ 19th century.
Horticulture __ History __ 19th century.
Diğer Yazarlar
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