'« L'opinion changée quant aux fleurs » ? les historiens et la « culture des fleurs »: un terrain par trop délaissé', in Revue d’histoire moderne & contemporaine 2000/4 (no 47-4), pages 815 à 827, [1]
École de la mignature : Dans laquelle on peut aisément apprendre à peindre sans maître, Lyon, Franc̜ois Du Chesne, 1679, p.87. Gallica: [3]
hortalia.org
bibliotheque-numerique.hortalia.org
Dictionnaire des plantes usuelles, des arbres et arbustes, des animaux qui servent d'alimens, de médicamens ou d'amusement à l'homme, et les minéraux qui sont d'usage en médecine ; ouvrage mis à la portée de tout le monde ; orné d'environ huit-cents planches... Par une société de gens de lettres, naturalistes et médecins, Paris 1793-94. Hortalia: [4]
Musée Cognacq-Jay, Inv.¬COG J373, [9].. The Victoria and Albert Museum has a pair of Encoignures (1760-1765), with each cupboard door decorated with a floral marquetry showing two different bouquets of perfectly identifiable flowers. V&A: [10]
Musée Cognacq-Jay, Inv.¬COG J373, [9].. The Victoria and Albert Museum has a pair of Encoignures (1760-1765), with each cupboard door decorated with a floral marquetry showing two different bouquets of perfectly identifiable flowers. V&A: [10]
It deals with trees (including fruit trees and orangery plants), the ‘kitchen garden’, the ‘flower’ garden and the ‘ornaments of the pleasure garden’ (general layout, grottoes, fountains, statues, perspectives). This is followed by a number of ‘drawings’ (garden plans, embroidery designs, etc.). The first orangery seems to have been built in Padua in 1645: Wolf Helmhardt von Hohberg [de] (1612–1688) depicts one, Georgica curiosa [fr], Nuremberg 1701); so does Jan van der Groen (Den Nederlandsen Hovenier, The Dutch Gardener, Amsterdam: Doornick, 1669). The word "orangery" is derived from the French "orangerie" which appeared in 1603 : Olivier de Serres used to call them "logis des orangers" (orange tree houses).
It deals with trees (including fruit trees and orangery plants), the ‘kitchen garden’, the ‘flower’ garden and the ‘ornaments of the pleasure garden’ (general layout, grottoes, fountains, statues, perspectives). This is followed by a number of ‘drawings’ (garden plans, embroidery designs, etc.). The first orangery seems to have been built in Padua in 1645: Wolf Helmhardt von Hohberg [de] (1612–1688) depicts one, Georgica curiosa [fr], Nuremberg 1701); so does Jan van der Groen (Den Nederlandsen Hovenier, The Dutch Gardener, Amsterdam: Doornick, 1669). The word "orangery" is derived from the French "orangerie" which appeared in 1603 : Olivier de Serres used to call them "logis des orangers" (orange tree houses).