Publish with Us

Follow Penguin

Follow Penguinsters

Follow Penguin Swadesh

Flora’s Empire

Flora’s Empire

British Gardens In Pbi - India

Eugenia W. Herbert
Select Preferred Format
Buying Options
Paperback / Hardback
Ebooks

The British created gardens in India not just out of simple nostalgia or homesickness, but also to put a visible stamp of ‘civilization’ on an alien, untamed land. Colonial gardens changed over time, from the ‘garden houses’ of the East India Company’s nabobs modelled on English country estates, and hill station cottages where English flowers could be coaxed into bloom, to the neat flowerbeds,
gravel walks, well-trimmed lawns and hedges of the Victorian sahibs. Every Government House, Civil Lines bungalow and cantonment was carefully landscaped to reflect current ideals of an ordered society. The British also made India part of the global network of botanical exploration and plant-collecting, and developed tea gardens and opium-poppy plantations to fill the coffers of the Empire.

More than sixty years after the British left, their garden legacy still lives on, reflected in the design of municipal parks and IT campuses, and in the tastes and practices of countless Indian home gardeners
who take pride in their green lawns and flowerbeds full of English flowers.

Imprint: India Allen Lane

Published: Jan/2013

ISBN: 9780670086481

Length : 420 Pages

MRP : ₹799.00

Flora’s Empire

British Gardens In Pbi - India

Eugenia W. Herbert

The British created gardens in India not just out of simple nostalgia or homesickness, but also to put a visible stamp of ‘civilization’ on an alien, untamed land. Colonial gardens changed over time, from the ‘garden houses’ of the East India Company’s nabobs modelled on English country estates, and hill station cottages where English flowers could be coaxed into bloom, to the neat flowerbeds,
gravel walks, well-trimmed lawns and hedges of the Victorian sahibs. Every Government House, Civil Lines bungalow and cantonment was carefully landscaped to reflect current ideals of an ordered society. The British also made India part of the global network of botanical exploration and plant-collecting, and developed tea gardens and opium-poppy plantations to fill the coffers of the Empire.

More than sixty years after the British left, their garden legacy still lives on, reflected in the design of municipal parks and IT campuses, and in the tastes and practices of countless Indian home gardeners
who take pride in their green lawns and flowerbeds full of English flowers.

Buying Options
Paperback / Hardback
Ebooks

Eugenia W. Herbert

Eugenia W. Herbert is Professor Emeritus of History st Mount Holyoke College, U.S.A. and the author of several books, including Twlight on the Zambezi: Late Colonialism in Central Africa.

error: Content is protected !!