312 



INDEX 



" Chanson de Roland," quoted, 67. 

 Chantilly, an example of rusticity, 274- 



275- 



Charing, royal gardens at, 79. 



Charlemagne, gardens of, 66-67. 



Charles II of England, French influence 

 on, 208. 



Charleston manor-house, forecourt at, 

 136. 



Charlton, example of garden-house at, 

 191. 



Chatsworth, garden at, attributed to Le 

 Notre, 208. 



Chaucer, quotations from, illustrative of 

 thirteenth-century English life, 83-96. 



Cherries, favourite fruit of the Anglo- 

 Saxons, 297. 



Chess-players, garden with, from "Ro- 

 mance of Alexander," 82. 



Chichester, gateway at, 186. 



Chilham Castle, bowling-green at, 288. 



Chinese, influence of, on English garden- 

 ing, 250, 259-266. 



Chipping Camden, garden-house at, 146. 



" Chorle and the Birde," Lydgate's, 81, 89. 



"Chronicles," Holinshed's, 133. 



Cistercians, horticulture in England ad- 

 vanced by, 58-59. 



Cisterns in Tudor gardens, 119. 



Clairvaux, Cistercian monastery at, 59-60. 



Clarendon, royal gardens at, 79. 



Clarissa's Walk, Penshurst, 100. 



Claverton Manor, example of balustrading 

 at, 140, 284. 



Cleeve Prior Manor, the Twelve Apostles 

 in topiary work at, 153, 154. 



Cleveland, Duchess of, gardens of, 58. 



Cloisters, location of, 52-53; Elizabethan 

 galleries correspond to, 145. 



Cloister-garth, the monastic, 7, 45, 54, 56; 

 resemblance of, to Grecian peristyle 

 and Roman atrium, 51. 



Cluny Museum, illustrations from tapes- 

 tries in, 75, 90. 



Cokes, the, owners of Melbourne, 210. 



Colonna, Giovanni, influence of, in Italian 

 gardening, 233, See " Hypneroto- 

 machia Poliphili." 



Columella, 17, 129, 133, 167. 



Column at Wilton, 240; and sun-dial, at 

 Old Place, Lingfield, 288, 289. 



"Compleat Gardner," Evelyn's, 212. 



Conservatories, Chinese, 264. See Green- 

 houses. 



Cook, Captain, cenotaph to, at Mauper- 

 tin, 273. 



Coronet of clipped yew, 116. 



" Country Farm." See " Maison Rus- 

 tique." 



"Country Housewife's Garden," knots 

 from, 149; knot and maze from, 158. 



Court of the Lions, Alhambra, fountain 

 in, 53. 



Courtyards, Egyptian dwellings built 

 around a series of, 6; in classic Ro- 

 man houses, 20-21, 24. 



Crete, labyrinth of, suggested in a mosaic 

 pavement, 5. 



Croquet-grounds, 287. 



Crusaders, innovations due to, in Eng- 

 land, 72-73, 75-76. 



Cubicula in classic Roman villas, 30. 



Cupid, statues of, at Melbourne, 208, 231. 



Cyrus the Younger, gardens of, at Sardis, 

 12; Pliny quoted concerning, 17. 



D 



Daedalus, house of, alternative name for 



labyrinth, 72. 

 Daffodils, Syrian, on site of Horseley 



Castle, 76. 



Dairy, Gothic, at Hoddesdon, 274. 

 Damascus, the rose of, 76. 

 Danby, Earl of, Oxford botanical garden 



founded by, 170. 



De Amicis, on Dutch gardens, 253-254. 

 Deeping, Norman garden at, 68-69. 

 Defoe, garden grottoes mentioned by, 



254- 



De Lacey, Earl of Lincoln, market gar- 

 dens of, 79-80. 



"De Naturis Rerum," Neckam's, 57; 

 Albert the Great's, quoted, 96-97. 



Denton, W., quoted, 79. 



De Serres, Olivier, 137, 139, 199. 



Diana's Pool, Penshurst, 99, 156. 



" Dictionarius," de Garlande's, quoted, 80. 



Diomedes, villa of, near Pompeii, 26-27. 



"Discourse of Husbandrie," etc., Hart- 

 lib's, 171. 



"Dissertations on Oriental Gardening," 

 Chambers', quoted, 261-264. 



