ABSTRACT
How 'green' were people in late antiquity and the Middle Ages? Unlike today, the nature around them was approached with faith, trust and care. The population size was many times smaller than today and human impact on nature not as extreme as it is now. People did not have to worry about issues like deforestation and sustainability. This book is about the knowledge of plants and where that knowledge came from. How did people use earth and plants in ancient times, and what did they know about their nutritional or medicinal properties? From which plants one could make dyes, such as indigo, woad and dyer's madder? Is it possible to determine that through technical research today? Which plants could be found in a ninth-century monastery garden, and what is the symbolic significance of plants in secular and religious literature? The Green Middle Ages addresses these and other issues, including the earliest herbarium collections, with a leading role for the palaeography and beautiful illuminations from numerous medieval manuscripts kept in Dutch and other Western libraries and museums.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|98 pages
Chronological Developments: From Herbarium Pictum to Herbarium Vivum
chapter |24 pages
Introduction
chapter 1|21 pages
From Copy to Copy 1500 Years of Plant Illustration: The Manuscript Tradition
chapter 2|14 pages
Early Printed Herbaria a Brief Outline Based on the Examples from the Liberna Collection
part II|72 pages
The Use of Plants in the Middle Ages
chapter 7|16 pages
‘The Cook is the Best Doctor’ Plants for Food and Health: Recipes and Prescriptions
part III|64 pages
Plants in Medieval Literature
chapter 9|18 pages
Good Trees, Bad Trees Biblical Tree and Plant Symbolism in the Liber Floridus
chapter 11|17 pages
Plants in Medieval Literature a Thorny Rose Bush and Other Greenery Love, Lust and Suffering in the Romance of the Rose
part IV|56 pages
Plants in Medieval Book Decoration
