GENERAL INDEX. 



119"; 



Hogg, Mr. Thomas, his works on gardening, page 

 1114. A. D. 1812. 



Hollymount, a seat in Mayo, 7673. 



Holmskioldia, didyn. angios. and verbenacea?, a S. 

 tr. India ; which grows in loam and peat, and 

 cuttings will root in sand under a hand-glass in 

 heat. 



Holt {hottz, Sax.), a small wood or grove. 



Holyrood Palace and Park, Edinburgh, 7317. and 

 7618. 



Home, Henrv, Lord Kaimes, his works on garden- 

 ing, page 1106. A. D. 1762. 



Honesty, — see Lunaria. 



Honewort, — see Sison. 



Honey-dew, 881. 



Honey-berry, melicocca bijuga. 



Honey-flower, — see Melianthus. 



Honey-suckle, — see Loniccra. 



Honey-wort, — see Cerinthe. 



Hooded milfoil, — see Utricularia. 



Hooker, W. J., LL.D. F.K.S., &c. a distinguished 

 botanist, professor of botany in the college of 

 Glasgow, and author of several works, 387. 



Hooker, William, Esq., F.L.S.,an eminent horticul- 

 tural artist, his works on gardening, page 1113. 

 A. D. 1811. 



Hop, — see Humulus. 



Hop-hornbeam, — see Ostrya. 



Hope, Thomas, Esq., his writings on gardening, 

 page 1114. A. D. 1820. 



Hope-end, a seat in Herefordshire, 7568. 



Hopea, polyad. polyan. and ebenacea;, a G. tr. Caro- 

 lina, which grows in loam and peat, and cuttings 

 root easily under a hand-glass. 



Hopeton House, Linlithgowshire, 7632. 



Hordeum, barley, trian. digyn. and graminca?, H. 

 peren. and an. Eur. As. and Amer. grasses of easy 

 culture. 



Horn-poppy, — see Chelidonium. 



Hornbeam, — see Carpinus. 



Horneinannia, didyn. angios. and scrophulnrinea?, a 

 S. an. E. lnd. of common culture. 



Hornwort, — see Ceratophyllum. 



Horse-chestnut, — see jEsculus. 



Horse-radish, — see Cochlearia Armoracia. 



Horse-radish tree, hyperanthera moringa. 



Horse-shoe vetch, — see Hippocrepis. 



Horse-tail, — see Equiaetum. 



Horse-thistle, — see Cnicus. 



Hort. Kew., Aiton's Hortus Kewensis. 



Hort. Trans., Transactions of the London horticul- 

 tural society. 



Horticultural architect, 7402. 



Horticultural artist, 7403. 



Horticultural catalogue, 346S. 



Horticultural productions which a first-rate garden 

 is calculated to afford monthly, 6036. 



Horticultural Society of London, 7707 ; of Edin- 

 burgh, 7707 ; of Winchester, 7594 ; of Leeds, 75S1 ; 

 of Glasgow, 7629 ; of Perth, 7636 ; of Dublin, 392. 



Horticultural Society of London, its transactions, 

 page 1114. A. D. 1815 ; garden, 7508. 



Hortus pinguis, or the fat, the cook's or kitchen- 

 garden. 



Hosack, David, M. D. F. Pv. S. L. S. &c. his works 

 on gardening, page 1131. A. D. 1S11. 



Hot-bed frames, bottomless boxes with glass covers, 

 for placing over hot-beds, 1532. 



Host;i, didyn. angios. and verbena ceffi, a S. tr. S. 

 Amer. which may be treated as holmskioldia. 



Hot-beds, beds of vegetable matter in a state of 

 active fermentation sufficient to heat a layer of 

 earth placed over them ; their formation, 1975. 



Hot-beds, their culture and management, — see 



Cucumis. 

 Hot-house, a garden structure, with the roof 

 principally of glass for the habitation of plants, 

 1583; principles of design in, 1591; how to 

 obtain heat 1592; light, air, soil, and water, 

 1593. to 1601. 

 Hot-house furnace and flues, iron doors, lime-kilns, 

 size of hot-house tire-places, flues, can-flue, em- 

 brasure-flue, cast-iron flue, size of flues, erection, 

 power of flues, dampers or valves, chimney-tops, 

 1648. to 1664. 

 Hot-house roofs, different methods of glazing, 1626 ; 

 common sash-glazing, 1627 ; with a leaden lap, 

 improved lead lap, copper lap, fragment-glazing, 

 rhomboidal-glazing, perforated shield-glazing, 

 entire shield-glazing, curvilinear lap, reversed 

 curvilinear lap, ridge and furrow, and anomalous 

 surfaces, 1628. to 1637 ; puttv and paint, 163S. and 

 1639. 



Hot-houses, contrivances for procuring water, wind, 

 and air, 1688. 



Hot-houses, details of the construction of their 

 roofs, 1602 ; fixed roofs, moveable roofs, roofs 

 partaking of both characters, materials of fixed 

 roofs, of moveable roofs, upr.ghts, and objections 

 to metallic roofs, 1603. to 1625. 



Hot-houses, their pits,-stages, shelves, doors, paths, 

 &c. 1681 ; materials of the path, pits for tan or 

 earth, beds and borders, shelves, stages, 1682. to 

 1687. 



Hot-houses, their steam boilers and tubes, 1665 ; 

 steam-boilers, of cast-iron, of wrought-iron, of cop- 

 per, steam-pipes, hot water pipes, 1666. to 1670. 



Hot-houses, their trellises, 1671 ; back wall trellis, 

 middle trellis, front or roof trellis, fixed rafter 

 trellis, moveable rafter trellis, secondary trellis, 

 cross trellis, 1672. to 1679; Hot-house entrance, 

 1680. 



Hot-houses, their walls and sheds, 1640; front wall, 

 holes for vine-stems, back wall, back shed, 1641. 

 to 1647. 



Hot-houses of the Chinese, specimen of, 480. 



Hot-houses used in floriculture, 6161. 



Hot-houses used in floriculture, their culture and 

 management, 6202. 



Hot-houses used in horticulture, 2644. 



Hot-houses used in horticulture, their culture and 

 management, 2696. 



Hottentot cherry, cassine maurocenia. 



Hottonia, water-violet, pen tan. monog. and primu- 

 laceaj, a H. peren. an aquatic. 



Houghton Hall, Norfolk, 7555 



Hound's tongue, — see Cynoglossum. 



House, or mansion, situations best adapted for, 

 7249 ; aspect, 7253. 



House, with carriage entrance, as a residence, 2029 ; 

 with covered entrance, 2030 ; house and conser- 

 vatory, 2031; house and flower-garden, 2032; 

 house and French parterre, 2033 ; house and front 

 garden, 2034. 



Houseleek, — see Sempervivum. 



Houstonia, tetran. monog. and rubiacea?, H. peren. 

 N. Amer. rock-work plants, which do well in peat 

 soil in pots. 



Hovea, diadel. deean. and leguminoseaj, G. tr. Aus- 

 tral, which thrive in loam and peat, and young 

 cuttings mav be struck under a bell-glass in sand. 



Hovenia, pentan. monog. and rhamnea;, a G. tr. 

 Japan ; which grow in loam and peat, and ripened 

 cuttings root readily under a hand-glass in sand. 



Howick, a seat in Northumberland, 7587. 



Howsham,*a scat in Yorkshire, 7582. 



Hoya, pentan. dig. and asclepiadea?, a S. tr. Asia ; 

 a climber of easy culture. 



Hubert Cand. his works on gardening, page 1125. 

 A. D. 1792. 



Huber, Francis, a natural philosopher of Geneva, 

 who wrote on bees, 1738. 



HUbncr, K. Jos., his works on gardening, page 1126. 

 A. D. 1801. 



Huernia, pentan. dig. and asclepiadea?, D. S. tr. 

 C.B.S. succulents, which grow in brick and lime- 

 rubbish, little watered ; cuttings root easily. 



Hughes, William, his works on gardening, page 

 1101. A. D. 1665. 



Huish, Robert, author and translator of some plays 

 and novels, and of a work on bees, of which in- 

 sect he is an enthusiastic admirer and cultivator, 

 1738. 



Hull botanic garden, 7581. 



Humble plant, mimosa pudica. 



Humea, syngen. polyg. aqual. and corymbifereae, a 

 G. bien. N. S. W. of easv culture. 



Humulus lupulus, hop, dure, pentan. and urticea\ 

 a H. peren. Brit. — see 3945. 



Hundeshagcn,Q , his work on gardening, page 



1127. A. D. 1819. 



Hunter, Alexander, M. D. F.R.S.; his works on 

 gardening, page 1108 A. D. 1770. 



Huntingdonshire, gardens and residences of, /550. 



Hura, sandbox-tree, moncec. monad, and euphor- 

 biacea;, S. tr. S. Amer. which grow freely in light 

 loam, and large ripened cuttings root in sand 

 under a hand-glass in heat. 



Hurstbourne Park, Hampshire, 7594. 



Hutchinsia, tetrad, silic. and cruciferen?, H. peren. 

 and a bien. Eur. rock-work plants which grow in 

 loam and peat, and root freely. 



Huthem, , his works on gardening, page 1129. 



A. D. 1817. 



Huts, as garden buildings, 1781. 

 Hvacinth, — «ee Hyacinthus. 



