INDEX 



315 



Garden-house, at Wimbledon, 174; and 



wall at The Orchards, 278; at Castle 



Ashby, 292. 

 Garden-houses, at Packwood, 145, 146, 



193, 194; octagonal, at Bradford-on- 



Avon and Bramshill, 190. 

 Gardening, early English books on, 107- 



109. 



Garden repast, a, 117. 

 Garden seat, at Haddon Hall, 189; at 



Canons Ashby, 189. 

 "Garin, Romance of," quoted, 81, 83. 

 Garland-makers in a pleasaunce, 66. 

 Garland-weavers (from a Greek vase), 14. 

 Garland weaving in England (thirteenth 



century), 83-84. 



Garlande, John de, description of bour- 

 geois garden by, 80. 

 Gate, wrought-iron, at Hampton Court, 



209. 

 Gate-post, flower-pot, at Hampton Court, 



187. 

 Gateway, garden, at Penshurst, 130; at 



Chichester, 186; at Shrublands, 239, 



at Castle Ashby, 240; and terrace, 



Barrow Court, 291. 



Gateways, at Packwood, 131, 187; intro- 

 duction of, in Stuart period, 188; at 



Drayton, 195, 196, 197; at Kew, 197, 



212; by Tijou, 198, 209. 

 Gennitings, defined, 151 n. 

 Gerard, John, quoted, 129-130, 132, 135. 

 Germany, landscape gardens in, 276. 

 Gestationes, defined, 36. 

 Girardin, Marquis de, gardens designed 



by, 270-273. 

 Giustiniani, on Henry VIII as a tennis 



player, 120. 



Godalming, gardens near, 292. 

 Gods, trees as emblems of, 41. 

 Goldsmith, Oliver, on Chinese gardening, 



260. 

 Grafting, a craft understood in Middle 



Ages, 97. 



Grafton Manor, dove-cotes at, 110. 

 Grave of Byron's dog, Newstead Abbey, 



62, 267. 

 Great Tangley Manor, water garden at, 



281. 

 Greece, the source of every new form of 



Roman art, 5; early gardens of, 12-14; 



later gardens of, 1417; information 

 sought from, by Euglish in Elizabethan 

 period, 129. 



Greenhouses, in classic gardens, 33; in 

 England in Stuart period, 192. See 

 Orangery, 

 regorovius, quoted concerning Hadrian's 



villa, 43-44. 

 Crete Herbal," the, 108. 



Grille, wrought-iron, at Drayton, 195. 



Groen, J. van der, " Jardinier Hollandais" 

 of, 145. 



Grotto, and pergola from a wall-painting 

 at Boscoreale, 32; at Wilton, Eng- 

 land, 163, 243. 



Grottoes in English gardens, 254-256; 

 Chinese, 260. 



Groves, according to Le Blond, 218-219. 



Gunnersbury, Kent's work in garden at, 

 268. 



H 



Haddon Hall, the terrace at, 141 ; garden 

 seat at, 189. 



Hadrian, villa of, at Tivoli, 43-44. 



Ham House, enclosed forecourt at, 188, 

 299; brick garden walls at, 188 ; fore- 

 court wall at, 232. 



Hampton Court, royal gardens at, 105, 

 106107, 162 ; banqueting house at, 

 116; Queen Mary's Walk at, 117; 

 the mount at, 118; carved beasts at, 

 118; tennis court at, 120; Henry 

 VIII's New Orchard at, 121 ; Queen 

 Elizabeth at, 142-143, 161-162; 

 water-works device at, 156; exam- 

 ples of brick walls at, 187 ; flower-pot 

 gate-post at, 187 ; iron gateways at, 

 1 88, 209; fountain at, 192; altera- 

 tions at, designed by Le Notre, 208- 

 210 ; sun-dial at, 209. 



Hanging gardens, 1112; in ancient 



Rome, 19-20. 



Hanging Gardens of Babylon, 1 1 ; Pliny 

 quoted concerning, 17. 



Harewood, terrace at, 246. 



Harleston, circular dove-cote at, 136. 



Harley-on-Thames, stew-pond at, 65. 



Harrison, 133-135. 



Hartlib, 167 ; "Discourse of Husbandrie 

 used in Brabant and Flanders " by, 

 171. 



