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Hedge Britannia: A Curious History of a British Obsession [Hardback]

3.89/5 (74 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 336 pages, height x width: 198x129 mm, weight: 441 g, Colour Inserts
  • Izdošanas datums: 10-May-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • ISBN-10: 1408801868
  • ISBN-13: 9781408801864
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Formāts: Hardback, 336 pages, height x width: 198x129 mm, weight: 441 g, Colour Inserts
  • Izdošanas datums: 10-May-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • ISBN-10: 1408801868
  • ISBN-13: 9781408801864
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
BBC Radio Four Book of the Week

Hedge Britannia is a portrait of the nation unlike any other. It is a tale of how agricultural and gardening traditions came to the British Isles, and of how our ideas of territory, neighbours and boundaries came to define town and country alike.

Over the centuries we have proved ourselves to be a nation of ardent hedge-growers and this has shaped the landscape we know today. From rolling acres to suburban plots, nothing would be quite the same if the hedge had not made its appearance. It was the arrival of hedges that turned the forests and open pastures of our ancestors into a land of segregated fields, twisting hedgerows, enclosed gardens and, eventually, over-the-top topiary, decorative borders and controversial leylandii.

Hugh Barker, a hedge enthusiast, has journeyed across Britain to explore its remarkable variety of gardens and hedgerows. Over the course of his travels he discovers how hedges are among our most ancient monuments, meets hedgelaying champions and topiary fanatics, and sees the lengths to which some people will go to annoy the neighbours. Along the way he tells how the garden hedge became associated with paradise, why the British army planted a barrier hedge hundreds of miles long in India, and how the notorious enclosures during the Industrial Revolution turned the country upsidedown. Informative, revealing, anecdotal and just a little eccentric, this is a sweeping history of Britain as you've never seen it before.

Recenzijas

Genuinely eccentric but lively and informative * Independent * One fruit in an orchard of idiosyncratic writing -- Boyd Tonkin * Independent * Delightful ... Rather charming * Daily Mail * A quirky idea, brilliantly realised * Independent i *

Papildus informācija

Celebrating the history and the glory of the British hedge
Introduction: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love My Hedge 1(16)
Part One Roots
Preamble: Where is Britannia?
17(4)
1 Why, What and Wherefore: The Meaning of `Hedge'
21(20)
2 Monks Wood: The Great British Hedgerow Experiment
41(20)
The Elephant Hedge
56(5)
3 Pleachers and Billhooks: The Ancient Art of Hedgelaying
61(22)
4 Land of Ghosts: From the Wildwood to the Birth of Hedges
83(18)
The Giant's Hedge, Cornwall
97(4)
5 A Common Treasury for All: A Brief History of the Enclosures
101(10)
6 A Green Maze: The Infinite Variety of the Garden Hedge
111(34)
The Chatsworth Maze
140(5)
7 The Hedges of Paradise: Formal and Sacred Gardens
145(16)
The Secret Garden
158(3)
8 The Dawn of Topiary: Reshaping Nature
161(20)
Levens Hall
174(7)
Part Two Growth and Conservation
Preamble: A Modest Proposal
181(6)
9 The Hedges Between Us: Quarrelsome Neighbours and Private Land
187(18)
10 This Land is My Land: Private Property
205(16)
The Customs Hedge of India
217(4)
11 Keeping Up with the Joneses: Hedges and Snobbery in the British Garden
221(24)
Hemingford Grey
240(5)
12 The Peculiar Hedges of Spitfire Island: Irregular Hedges and Hedgelike Objects
245(16)
The Whale-Shaped Hedge
257(4)
13 The Rural Idyll: Preserving the Countryside
261(18)
The Hedgerows of Eaglescairnie Mains
277(2)
14 The Hedge People: The Symbolism and Politics of Hedges
279(16)
Hatfield's Yew Tunnels
291(4)
15 State of the Nation: The Future of Hedge Britannia
295(13)
Bibliography 308(4)
Picture Credits 312(1)
Acknowledgements 313(1)
Index 314
Hugh Barker has been a bookseller, musician, fruit picker, barman, publisher and writer, amongst other things. He currently lives in North London with his wife, daughter and several cats, surrounded by a small hedge that he can call his own.