by Ada V. Segre
Harvard University Press, 2006
Cloth: 978-0-88402-302-9
Library of Congress Classification SB466.I82P534 2006
Dewey Decimal Classification 635.909454609032

ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK

This fascinating two-volume set includes a photographic reproduction of an anonymous seventeenth-century Italian gardener’s notebook from Dumbarton Oaks’s Rare Books Collection.

The notebook is a record of the planting of three flower gardens at San Lorenzo. It is now believed that the gardens were created for Margherita de’ Medici Farnese, duchess of Parma and Piacenza. The notebook provides insight into the creation of a seventeenth-century garden, from identifying flowers to planning flowerbeds. In turn, these sketches reveal the gardener’s own intentions and reflections on the designs.

Ada Segre’s accompanying study of the notebook is a groundbreaking example of garden archaeology. She considers its provenance and connection to the world of the duchess and her gardens. Segre also evaluates the importance of the manuscript as an object and as a source of information on garden design and practice in Italy during the mid-seventeenth century. Three computer-generated recreations of the garden’s planting beds are included with the reproduction.


See other books on: 17th century | Gardening | Gardens | Landscape | Translation
See other titles from Harvard University Press