N.º 99413733

Vendido
Anon - The Gardeners' chronicle: a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects for 1880 - 1880
Licitação final
€ 25
Há 4 dias

Anon - The Gardeners' chronicle: a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects for 1880 - 1880

A very RARE and scarce edition of "The Gardeners' chronicle :a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects" for 1880...ONLY copy selling worldwide!!! The Gardener's Chronicle differs from other science periodicals in that it resembles a newspaper rather than a magazine, being printed in three columns and published on a weekly basis. It was co-founded by John Lindley (1799-1865), Joseph Paxton (1803-65), Charles Wentworth Dilke (1810-69) and the printer William Bradbury (1800-1869). Lindley was Professor of Botany at University College London, and became the periodical's first editor. Paxton had been made head gardener of the Chatsworth Estate in Derbyshire at the age of twenty, and went on to be a pioneer in the design of greenhouses, cultivating the Cavendish banana (named after his employer, the Duke of Cavendish), which has become the most commonly consumed variety of banana in the Western world. Paxton would later go on to design the Crystal Palace of the 1851 Great Exhibition. The Gardener's Chronicle attracted readers with a variety of interests beyond that of gardening. Notably, Charles Darwin regularly browsed its columns and contributed material on several occasions. In the years preceding his publication of the Origin of Species in 1859, when he was still gathering evidence to support his theories, he wrote numerous letters requesting information. For example, he asked if seeds could germinate after prolonged exposure to the salt in seawater, as he attempted to explain how similar plants could occur in regions separated by oceans. Periodicals such as the Gardener's Chronicle, with their wide circulation and policy of printing letters from readers, allowed Darwin and others to seek out the expertise of individuals who would otherwise have remained unknown to them. Nineteenth-century science relied on such informal networks of correspondence, and periodicals greatly expanded the number of people a single letter could address. Much of Darwin's research was therefore done from the relative comfort of his writing desk rather than out in the field. Externally wear around edges and corners, shelfwear-see pthotos, boards reattached so a bit fragile, inside endpapers spotted, ffe partially cut out. From January to June: 824 pages-----starts at page 225. lacking pages 271 to 274, 288 to 321, 385 to 392, 409 to 416, 481 to 512, 577 to 800. From June to December 676 pages arriving until November 20th, lacking first 65 pages. Lost pages not inserted by binder, no signs of pages ripped off. Inside overall clean and still attractive. Scarce.

N.º 99413733

Vendido
Anon - The Gardeners' chronicle: a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects for 1880 - 1880

Anon - The Gardeners' chronicle: a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects for 1880 - 1880

A very RARE and scarce edition of "The Gardeners' chronicle :a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects" for 1880...ONLY copy selling worldwide!!!
The Gardener's Chronicle differs from other science periodicals in that it resembles a newspaper rather than a magazine, being printed in three columns and published on a weekly basis. It was co-founded by John Lindley (1799-1865), Joseph Paxton (1803-65), Charles Wentworth Dilke (1810-69) and the printer William Bradbury (1800-1869). Lindley was Professor of Botany at University College London, and became the periodical's first editor. Paxton had been made head gardener of the Chatsworth Estate in Derbyshire at the age of twenty, and went on to be a pioneer in the design of greenhouses, cultivating the Cavendish banana (named after his employer, the Duke of Cavendish), which has become the most commonly consumed variety of banana in the Western world. Paxton would later go on to design the Crystal Palace of the 1851 Great Exhibition. The Gardener's Chronicle attracted readers with a variety of interests beyond that of gardening. Notably, Charles Darwin regularly browsed its columns and contributed material on several occasions. In the years preceding his publication of the Origin of Species in 1859, when he was still gathering evidence to support his theories, he wrote numerous letters requesting information. For example, he asked if seeds could germinate after prolonged exposure to the salt in seawater, as he attempted to explain how similar plants could occur in regions separated by oceans. Periodicals such as the Gardener's Chronicle, with their wide circulation and policy of printing letters from readers, allowed Darwin and others to seek out the expertise of individuals who would otherwise have remained unknown to them. Nineteenth-century science relied on such informal networks of correspondence, and periodicals greatly expanded the number of people a single letter could address. Much of Darwin's research was therefore done from the relative comfort of his writing desk rather than out in the field.
Externally wear around edges and corners, shelfwear-see pthotos, boards reattached so a bit fragile, inside endpapers spotted, ffe partially cut out.
From January to June: 824 pages-----starts at page 225. lacking pages 271 to 274, 288 to 321, 385 to 392, 409 to 416, 481 to 512, 577 to 800.
From June to December 676 pages arriving until November 20th, lacking first 65 pages.
Lost pages not inserted by binder, no signs of pages ripped off. Inside overall clean and still attractive.
Scarce.

Licitação final
€ 25
Zena Chiara Masud
Especialista
Estimativa  € 150 - € 190

Objetos semelhantes

Para si em

Livros

Definir um alerta de pesquisa
Defina um alerta de pesquisa para ser notificado quando surgirem novos resultados.

Este objeto foi mostrado em

                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    

Como comprar na Catawiki

Saber mais sobre a nossa proteção do comprador

      1. Descubra algo especial

      Navegue por milhares de objetos especiais selecionados por especialistas. Veja as fotos, os detalhes e o valor estimado de cada objeto especial. 

      2. Faça a licitação vencedora

      Encontre algo que adora e faça a licitação vencedora. Pode acompanhar o leilão até ao fim ou deixar o nosso sistema licitar por si. Apenas tem de definir o valor máximo que está disposto a pagar. 

      3. Faça um pagamento seguro

      Pague o seu objeto especial e mantemos o seu pagamento seguro até o seu objeto chegar são e salvo. Utilizamos um sistema de pagamento confiável para processar todas as transações. 

Tem algo parecido para vender?

Quer tenha entrado agora no mundo dos leilões online ou venda a título profissional, podemos ajudá-lo a ganhar mais pelos seus objetos especiais.

Venda o seu objeto