GENERAL INDEX. 



1183 



Cours Comp. d'Ag., Nouveau Cours Complet d' Ag- 

 riculture, &c. 13 vols. 8vo. Paris, 1810. 



Covent, or Convent Garden market, its gardening 

 productions with their average prices, 7514. 



Coventry, Francis, his works on English gardening, 

 page 1104. A. D. 1753. 



Cow-bane, — see Cicuta. 



Cow-itch, — see Stizolobium. 



Cow-parsnep, — see Heracleum. 



Cow-wheat, — see Melampyrum. 



Cowel, John, a British author on gardening, page 

 1103. A. D. 1729. 



Cowesfield House, V/iltshire, 7596. 



Cowley, Abraham, the poet, as a British author on 

 gardening, page 1100. A. D. 1662. 



Cowslip, — see Primula. 



Coxe, William, Esq., his work on fruit-trees, page 



1131. A. D. 1817. 

 Cracow, garden of Marshal Loudon at, 282. 

 Craggan, a seat in Westmeath, 7662. 

 Craiggie Hall, a seat near Edinburgh, 360. 

 Crailing House, Roxburghshire, 7621. 

 Crambe, colewort, tetrad, silic. and crucifereEe, G. tr. 



and peren. and an. Eur and Amer. which thrive 



in rich, light soil, and are increased by seed or 



dividing the root. 

 Crambe maritima, the seakale, 3898. 

 Cramer, John Andrew, his works on gardening, 



page 1124. A. D. 1766. 

 Cranberry, — see Oxycoccus 

 Cranbury House, Hampshire, 7594. 

 Cranesbill, — see Geranium. 

 Cranford iiridge, K'orthamptonshire, 7580. 

 Cranford Lodge, Middlesex, 7520. 

 Crassuhi, pentan. pentag. and semperviveee, G. tr. 



peren. and an. and H. an. C. B. S. succulents of 



easy culture. 



Cratffiva, garlic-pear, dodec. monog. and capparideze, 

 S. tr. 'W. Ind. and Afr. which grow in loam, 

 j)eat, and rotten dung, and are increased by cut- 

 tings in sand, under a hand-glass. 



Cree House, Kircudbrightshire, 7625. 



Crepis, syngen. polyg. jequal. and cichoracea;, H. 

 tr. peren. bien. and an. Eur. of easy culture. 



Crescentia, calabash-tree, didyn. angios. and sola- 

 neas, S. tr. W. Ind. which grow in loam and 

 peat ; and \^ell ripened cuttings root in sand 

 under a hand-glass in moist heat. 



Cress, — see Lepidium. 



Cress-rocket, — see Vella. 



Crewe Hall, Cheshire, 7590. 



Crichton, formerly a distinguished seat near Edin- 

 burgh, 385. 



Crinum, hexan. monog. and amaryllidete, S. G. 

 peren. Amer. and Ind. which grow in rich 

 loam v/ith dung, in large pots, and are increased 

 by suckers, or by seeds. 



Cristaria, monad, polyan. and malvaces, a H. 

 l)eren. Missouri, which grows only in peat in 

 a shaded border, and increases slowly by seeds, 

 rr dividing at the root. 



Crithmum, samphire, pentan. dig. and umbellifereaj, 

 a G. bien. and H. peren. which grow in light, 

 sandy soil, and are increased by seeds, or dividing 

 at tiie roots. 



Crithmum maritimum, the common samphire, 4278. 

 Crocus, trian. monog. and iridese, H. peien. Asia 



and Kui-. bulbs of the easist culture, 6285. 

 Cromartyshire, in respect to gai-dening, 7643. 

 Crome, G. his work on gardening, page 1127. A. D. 



Crome Court, Worcestershire, 7566. 



Crossandra, didyn. angios. and acanthaceas, a S. tr. 

 E. Ind. which thrives well in rich, light soil, and 

 cuttings root in sand under a hand-glass. 



Cross-wort, — see Crucianella. 



Crotalaria, diadel. decan. and leguminoseEe, S. and 

 G. tr. bien. and an. E. Ind. and Afr. which 

 grow in loam and peat, and are increased by 

 young cuttings in sand under a bell-glass ; some 

 species ripen seeds. 



Croton, moncec. monad, and euphorbiacece, S. tr. 

 and an. Ind. Amer. and Eur. which grow in 

 loam and peat, and cuttings with their leaves 

 on root in sand under a hand-glass. 



Crowberry, — see Empetrum. 



Crowea, decan. monog. a G. tr. N. S. W. which 

 grows in .sandy loam and peat, in an airy situ- 

 ation, and not over-watered, and cuttings root 

 freely in sand under a bell-glass. 



Crowfoot, — see Ranunculus. 



Croxdale Hall, Durham, 7584. 



Crucianella, cross-wort, tetran. monog. and rubia- 



ccaz, G. and H. tr. and an. Eur. of common 

 culture. 



Crux Easton, a seat in Hampshire, 7594. 



Crypsis, trian. dig. and gramincee, a H. an. Eur. a 



grass of easy culture. 

 Cryptarrhena, gynan. monan. and orchideje, a S. 



parasite, which may be treated as aeridos. 

 Cryptospermum, tetran. monog. and nyctaginece, a 



G. peren. N. S. W. which grows in loam and 



peat, and cuttings root freely under a hand-glass 



in sand. 



Cryptostcmma, syngen. polyg. frustran. and corym- 

 bifereas, H. an. C. B. S. of common culture.- 



Cubieres, , Ain^, his works on gardening, page 



1121. A. D. ISOJ. 



Cuckoo-flower, lychnis floscuculi. 



Cucubalus, campion, decan. trig, and carophyllese, 

 a H. peren. Eng. of common culture. 



Cucumber, 4873. — see C'ucumis. 



Cucumis, cucumber, moncec. monad, and cueur- 

 bitace<E, F. and H. an. India an4 C. B. S. of 

 common culture in rich soil. 



Cucumis melo, the melon, under hand-glasses, 3262 j 

 culture of, 3271 ; soil, 3272; time of beginning 

 to force, 3279; forming the teed-bed, choice of 

 seed, sowing, 3281 ; treatment lill removed to the 

 fruiting-bed, 3287 ; forming the fruiting-bed, 

 moulding, planting, 3288; temperature, 3291 ; 

 air, 3295 ; water, 3298 ; earthing, S302 ; training, 

 3303 ; setting, 3307 ; cutting the fruit, and saving 

 seed, 3312 ; second crop from the same plants, 

 3315; late crops on old hot-beds, 3318 ; culture 

 of melons in a dung-pit, 3319 ; in a flued-pit, 3320 ; 

 in M'Phail's pit, 3321 ; under hand-glasses, 3322 ; 

 on a sloping bank, 3329 ; insects and diseases, 

 3330. 



Cucumis sativus, the common cucumber, sorts of 

 described, 4873 ; culture of in hot-beds, 3164 ; 

 treatment till removed to the fruiting-bed, 3192 ; 

 forming the fruiting-bed, 3199; air, 3217; water, 

 3221; training, 3257 ; culture in a flued-pit, 3236 ; 

 in M'Phail's pit, 3238 ; in stoves, 3251 ; in Weeks's 

 patent frame, 3261 ; sorts described, 4869. 



Cucurbita, gourd, moncec. monad, and cucurbi- 

 taceffi, F. and H. an. Ind. and S. Eur. of com- 

 mon culture in rich soil. 



Cucurbita pepo, the pompion; C. citrullus, the 

 water-melon; C. melo pepo, the squash-gourd; 

 C. verrucosa, the warted gourd ; C. lagenaria, the 

 bottle-gourd ; C. aurantia, the orange-fruited 

 gourd ; and C. succado, the vegetable-marrow 

 gourd. 



CufFnels, Hampshire, 7594. 



Culex, the gnat, a dipterous insect, 2267. 



Culland's Grove, Middlesex, 7520. 



Cullen House, in Banfshire, 7640. 



Cullumia, syngen. polyg. frustr. and corymbifere^, 



G. tr. C. I?. S. v/hich thrive in loam and peat, 

 and cuttings root in the same soil under a hand- 

 glass. 



Culzean Castle, in Ayrshire, 7627. 

 Cumberland, gardens and residences of, 7593. 

 Cumin, cuminum cyminum. 



Cuminum, cumin, pentan. dig. and umbellifereas, a 



H. an. of common culture. 



Cunila, dian. monog. and labiateee, H. peren. N. 



Amer. and Eur. of common culture. 

 Cunonia, decan. dig. and cunoniace«, a G. tr. 



C. B. S. which grows in loam and peat, ripened 



cuttings will root in sand under a hand-glass. 

 Cuphea, dodec. monog. and salicares, a S. tr. and 



bien. and G. bien. and an. Amer. of common 



culture. 



Cupressus, cypress, moncec. monad, and conifereie, 

 G. tr. Amer. and C. B. S. which grow well in 

 loam, and peat, and cuttings root in sand under a 

 bell-glass ; and H. tr. which grow in common 

 soil, and are raised from seeds. 



Curatella, polyan. dig. and magnolite, a S. tr. S. 

 Amer. which thrives in sandy loam, and cuttings 

 root in a pot of sand under a hand-glass. 



Curculigo, hexan. monog. and asphodeleae, S. and 

 G. peren. E. Ind. bulbs of the usual culture. 



Curculio, the weevil, a coleopterous insect which 

 inhabits grain, nuts, and other seeds, 2235. 



Curculio nucum, the filbert-weevil, 4761. 



Curcuma, turmeric, dian. monog. and scitamine«, 

 S. peren. E. Ind. reedy marsh plants, increased 

 by division at the root. 



Curraghmore, a seat in Waterford, 7665. 



Currant, — see Bibes. 



Curt. Spreng.,Curtii Sprengei HistoriaRei Herbaria?. 

 Curtains for shelter, — see Structures. 



