570 



INDEX. 



Mans, Van. at Brussels, 301. — list of 

 his pears existing at Edinburgh, 54-1. 



Montmartre, 441. 



Montmorency cherry recommended, 

 4T8 — orchards at Montmorency, 

 198. 



Montreuil peach-gardens, 124 — plan 

 of one, 426 — Loriant's garden, 427. 



— Mozard's, 429 his mode of 



training peach-trees, &c. 430. 



Monuments, French, collection of, 450. 



Mouceaux, elegant villa of Due d'Or- 

 leans, near Paris, 360. and 451. 



Mozard, John, cultivator at Montreuil, 

 429 — his mode of training peach- 

 trees, 430, — his work on the culture 

 of the peach-tree, 432. 



Mulberry -tree, ancient, at Canterbury, 

 13 — large, at Rotterdam, 123 — at 

 Leyden, 162. 



Mummy, or grafting cement, 203. 



Museums, at Haarlem, 188 — at Brus- 

 sels, 305 — magnificent, at Paris, 

 355. 



Mushroom -beds, Oldakers', 508. 



Navet, or French turnip, 348. 



Nectarines, or peches lisses, at Paris, 



349 — at Montreuil, 428 early 



nectarine called Desprez, recom- 

 mended, 463. 



Neriums, fine, in Flanders, 77. 



New Forest, Hampshire, 560. 



Newspapers, little circulation of, in 

 Flanders, 89. and 1 13. 



Nigella cultivated as a garden -crop at 

 Bruges, 31. 



Noisette's nurseries at Paris. 457.— 

 his work on fruit-trees, 468. 



Noordwyck, rose-gardens of, 179. 



Notre, Le, his style of gardening at 

 the Tuileries, 371 — at Versailles, 

 4-08 — Vaux-Praslin, the first place 

 designed by him, 478 — his monu- 

 ment, 451. 



Nurseries, Chandler and Bucking- 

 ham's, 6 Thomson, Mile-End, 9. 



-De Cock's, Ghent. 43 Van Cas- 



sels', Spaes' and DeWulf's, Ghent, 

 66", 67 — Kreps and Co. Haarlem, 



200 Lunteren, Utrecht, 254 



Kapcrkcn, Breda, 266 Van Mons, 



liru nd I, 307. — Lacroix, Paris, 416. 

 — Celt 1 ■ it Petit Mont Rouge, ex- 



cellent, 418.- at Vitry, 447 Noi- 

 sette's at Paris, excellent, 457. — 

 Chartreux or Luxembourg, 469 — of 

 the Roule, 475 — Vallet's, at Rouen, 

 496, — Calvert and Co.'s, Rouen, 

 497. — .Jenkins's, New Road, Lon- 

 don, 501. — the Vinery, Hammer- 

 smith, 504 — at Fulham, 510 — at 

 NewCross, 5 1 1 — Loddiges, at Hack - 

 ney, 51 4 — Smith's, at Dalston, 515. 



Oak, weeping, at Amsterdam, 218. 



Oils, vegetable, plants cultivated for 

 producing, 337. and 339. 



Olive-trees. 417. 



Onions at Ghent, 47 — silver-skinned 

 at Paris, 348. 



Orache, garden, common in Paris 

 market, 490. 



Orangery, summer, at Antwerp, 98 



at Enghien, excellent, 323 at Ver- 

 sailles, 411 — at the Luxembourg, 

 415. 



■ winter, at Brussels, 277. — at 

 Enghien, 324 at Versailles, 412. 



Orange-trees, collections of, at Bruges, 



27. — at Oeydonck, 61 at Antwerp, 



98— Brussels, 276. & 296 at the 



Tuileries, 371 — at La Malmaison, 

 fine, 398. — at Versailles, magnifi- 

 cent, 411. — at the Luxembourg, 

 415 — M. Boursault's, planted en 

 pleine terre, 455 — large sale collec- 

 tion at Rouen, 496. 



Orchards, near Ghent, 58 — in Nor- 

 mandy, 494. 



Orleans, Duke of, his numerous coun- 

 try-seats, 451. 



Ostend, 19 — green-market, 20 — Fort 

 Wellington, 21. 



Pacane walnut, 466. 



Paeonia, species and varieties of, at 

 London, 7. 



Pagoda, near Ghent, 82 — near Ant- 

 werp, 99. 



Paintings, exhibition of, at Ghent,' 49, 

 — at Antwerp, 92. and 97 — at Am- 

 sterdam, 234 — at Brussels, 305. 



Palais Rcyal at, Paris 345. 



Palm-tree of Clusius, at Leyden, 154. 

 — palms at Utrecht garden, 244 — 

 at Jardin des Plantes, 352. — at 

 Loddiges', Hackney, 514. 



