The importance of gardens as places to cure the mind from sad thoughts was acknowledged by René Descartes (1596-1650) in his epistolary exchange with Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia (1618-1680). The claim was not unconventional and it marked a continuity in the representation of gardens as spaces of philosophical inspiration throughout Antiquity, the Middle Ages, and early modernity
Traditionally conceived of as subordinate bodies in the study of nature, plants gained momentum in t...
Traditionally conceived of as subordinate bodies in the study of nature, plants gained momentum in t...
In his book, L’Art du jardin et son histoire, seeking a theory on garden design, Hunt explains the v...
The importance of gardens as places to cure the mind from sad thoughts was acknowledged by René Desc...
The importance of gardens as places to cure the mind from sad thoughts was acknowledged by René D...
Gardens have increasingly become the focus of scholarly attention. Parallel to a new, fascinating ph...
Gardens have increasingly become the focus of scholarly attention. Parallel to a new, fascinating ph...
This volume focuses on the outstanding contributions made by botany and the mathematical sciences to...
Although the history of early modern gardens has benefited in recent decades from an increasingly wi...
In this article, I argue that the French philosopher René Descartes was far more involved in the stu...
Early modern study of plants blossomed in a network of observation, exchanges, collaborations, and e...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Post-Medieval Archaeol...
While improving medicine through physics had the capacity to liberate seventeenth-century thinking f...
Famous as the author of the Botanic Garden (1791) and grandfather of Charles Darwin (1809-1882), Era...
During the 17th and 18th centuries, the French garden history witnesses the triumph and then the dec...
Traditionally conceived of as subordinate bodies in the study of nature, plants gained momentum in t...
Traditionally conceived of as subordinate bodies in the study of nature, plants gained momentum in t...
In his book, L’Art du jardin et son histoire, seeking a theory on garden design, Hunt explains the v...
The importance of gardens as places to cure the mind from sad thoughts was acknowledged by René Desc...
The importance of gardens as places to cure the mind from sad thoughts was acknowledged by René D...
Gardens have increasingly become the focus of scholarly attention. Parallel to a new, fascinating ph...
Gardens have increasingly become the focus of scholarly attention. Parallel to a new, fascinating ph...
This volume focuses on the outstanding contributions made by botany and the mathematical sciences to...
Although the history of early modern gardens has benefited in recent decades from an increasingly wi...
In this article, I argue that the French philosopher René Descartes was far more involved in the stu...
Early modern study of plants blossomed in a network of observation, exchanges, collaborations, and e...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Post-Medieval Archaeol...
While improving medicine through physics had the capacity to liberate seventeenth-century thinking f...
Famous as the author of the Botanic Garden (1791) and grandfather of Charles Darwin (1809-1882), Era...
During the 17th and 18th centuries, the French garden history witnesses the triumph and then the dec...
Traditionally conceived of as subordinate bodies in the study of nature, plants gained momentum in t...
Traditionally conceived of as subordinate bodies in the study of nature, plants gained momentum in t...
In his book, L’Art du jardin et son histoire, seeking a theory on garden design, Hunt explains the v...