Medieval and Early Modern Garden in Britain

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Amy Louise Morgan
Category=NHD
Category=NHTB
Category=WMB
conclusus
Daisy Black
Documented Start Point
Early Modern Garden
Edward III
Edwardian Castles
Emily Cock
environmental humanities
Eoin Price
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eq_history
eq_home-garden
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Fairy Maiden
garden archaeology
gardens
gendered space analysis
grace
Grape Vines
Henry III
historical landscape studies
history
Horticultural Therapy
hortus
Hortus Conclusus
Hr Increase
Kenilworth Castle
literary garden symbolism
Liz Herbert McAvoy
Manuel Schwembacher
Medieval Garden
medieval horticulture
Medieval Hortus Conclusus
Middle Ward
monastic
mount
Mount Grace Priory
National Library
Norwich Grocers
orfeo
Participant's Blood Pressure
Participant’s Blood Pressure
pleasure
premodern British garden research
Ravensworth Castle
Sara Jones
sir
Sir Orfeo
Spencer Gavin Smith
St Gall Plan
Theresa Tyers
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367515447
  • Weight: 254g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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What was a "garden" in medieval and early modern British culture and how was it imagined? How did it change as Europe opened up to the wider world from the 16th century onwards? In a series of fresh approaches to these questions, the contributors offer chapters that identify and discuss newly-discovered pre-modern garden spaces in archaeology and archival sources, recognize a gendered language of the garden in fictional descriptions ("fictional" here being taken to mean any written text, regardless of its purpose), and offer new analysis of the uses to which gardens - real and imagined - might be put. Chapters investigate the definitions, forms and functions of physical gardens; explore how the material space of the garden was gendered as a secluded space for women, and as a place of recreation; examine the centrality of garden imagery in medieval Christian culture; and trace the development of garden motifs in the literary and artistic imagination to convey the sense of enclosure, transformation and release. The book uniquely underlines the current environmental "turn" in the humanities, and increasingly recognizes the value of exploring human interaction with the landscapes of the past as a route to health and well-being in the present.

Patricia Skinner holds a Personal Chair in History at Swansea University.

Theresa Tyers is Research Fellow at Swansea University.