Erasmus Darwin’s Gardens
Title Details

366 Pages

23.3 x 15.5 cm

13 colour, 38 b/w, 12 line illus.

Series: Garden and Landscape History

Series Vol. Number: 9

Imprint: Boydell Press

Erasmus Darwin's Gardens

Medicine, Agriculture and the Sciences in the Eighteenth Century

by Paul A. Elliott

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This first full study of Erasmus Darwin's gardening, horticulture and agriculture shows he was as keen a nature enthusiast as his grandson Charles, and demonstrates the ways in which his landscape experiences transformed his understanding of nature.

Famous as the author of the Botanic Garden (1791) and grandfather of Charles Darwin (1809-1882), Erasmus Darwin (1731-1802) was a larger-than-life enlightenment natural philosopher (scientist) and writer who practised as a doctor across the English Midlands for nearly half a century. A practical gardener and horticulturist, Darwin created a botanic garden near Lichfield - which galvanised his poetry - and kept other gardens, an orchard and small "farm" in Derby. Informed by his medical practice and botanical studies, Darwin saw many parallels between animals, plants and humans which aroused hostility during the years of revolution, warfare and reaction, but helped him to write Zoonomia (1794/96) and Phytologia (1800) - his major studies of medicine, agriculture and gardening. Captivated by the changing landscapes and environments of town and country and supported by social networks such as those in Lichfield and Derby, Darwin avidly exchanged ideas about plants, animals and their diseases with family, patients, friends such as the poet Anna Seward (1742-1809), farmers, fellow doctors, huntsmen and even the local mole catcher.
The is the first full study of Erasmus Darwin's gardening, horticulture and agriculture. It shows him as keen a nature enthusiast as his contemporary Rev. Gilbert White of Selbourne (1720-1793) or his grandson Charles, fascinated with everything from swarming insects and warring bees to domestic birds and dogs, pigs and livestock on his farm to fungi growing from horse dung in Derby tan yards. Ranging over his observations of plant physiology and anatomy to the use of plant "bandages" in his orchard and electrical machines to hasten seed germination to explosive studies of vegetable "brains", nerves and sensations, the book demonstrates the ways in which Erasmus Darwin's landscape and garden experiences transformed his understanding of nature. They provided him with insights into medicine and the environmental causes of diseases, the classification of plants and animals, chemistry, evolution, potential new medicines and foodstuffs and the ecological interdependency of the natural economy. Like the amorous vegetables of the Loves of the Plants (1789) which fascinated, scandalised and titillated late Georgian society, the many living creatures of Darwin's gardens and farm encountered in this book were for him real, dynamic, interacting and evolving beings who helped inspire and re-affirm his progressive social and political outlook.
INTRODUCTION

1 LICHFIELD AND DERBY GARDENS
2 MEDICINAL PLANTS AND THEIR PLACES
3 AGRICULTURAL IMPROVEMENT: ENCLOSURE AND THE APPLICATION OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
4 VEGETABLE PHYSIOLOGY, TECHNOLOGY AND AGRICULTURE
5 VEGETABLE PATHOLOGY AND MEDICINE
6 AMONGST THE ANIMALS7 ANIMAL DISEASES
8 "EATING OF THE TREE OF KNOWLEDGE": FORESTRY, ARBORICULTURE AND MEDICINE
9 TREES IN THE ECONOMY OF NATURE

CONCLUSION

Select Bibliography
Index

PAUL ELLIOTT is Professor of Modern History at the University of Derby.

"[An] important addition to Erasmus Darwin scholarship." Eighteenth-Century Intelligencer
"Elliott's deeply researched and stimulating book sets a high standard for future scholarship on Darwin." H-NET

Hardcover

9781783276103

June 2021

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9781800101401

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Title Details

366 Pages

2.33 x 1.55 cm

13 colour, 38 b/w, 12 line illus.

Series: Garden and Landscape History

Series Vol. Number: 9

Imprint: Boydell Press