Lady Boscawen's seventeenth-century plant notebook:
Some issues in herbal and garden history
To what extent did housewives grow
and collect herbs for medicinal use in early modern times? Contemporary printed
sources suggest that women took much responsibility for gardens and household
healthcare in this period. However, there has been limited scholarly study of
the extent to which women planned or carried out such activities. Dr Anne Stobart, a medical herbalist and member of the Herbal
History Research Network, will consider these questions and describe her
research interests. Anne was based at Middlesex University in London from
2000 and held the post of Director of Programmes for Complementary Health
Sciences until 2010. She completed her PhD in 2009; her thesis focused on
seventeenth-century domestic medicine in South-west England.
Where: Kenn Centre, Kennford, Exeter, EX6 7UE.
When: Wednesday 19th March 2014 at 2.30p.m. (Doors
open at 2.00p.m.)
Cost: £5 (DGT members)/ £6 (non-members) to include
afternoon refreshments. Please book before Monday 17th March 2014.
To book, please download a booking
form here or
contact Dr Ian M Varndell (tel. 07769 335506 or email events@devongardenstrust.org.uk).
Devon Gardens Trust (DGT) is an
active charitable company which aims to:
- promote the education of the public on matters connected with the arts and sciences of garden land;
- preserve, enhance and re-create for education and enjoyment of the public whatever garden land may exist in and around the county of Devon.