Thursday, June 30, 2022

This Day in Medieval Garden Myth & Reality

Angie Capozello of Medieval Gardens shares:

ENLUMINURES EUROPE - VIe - XVIe s. - ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPTS EUROPE

 June 30th is the 181st day of the Gregorian calendar year.

It was usually the 12th day of the month of messidor in the French Republican calendar, officially called ARTICHAUT (ARTICHOKE) Day

Calligraphiae monumenta. Enlightenment: Joris Hoefnagel (also known as Georg Hufnagel), born in 1542 in Antwerp and died September 9, 1601 in Vienna (Austria), and Georg Bocskay (Hungarian, died in 1575). Date and place of publication: Vienna, Austria, 1561–1562-1591–1596. Latin manuscript illuminated on velin Getty Los Angeles, CA 90049. U.S.

Wednesday, June 29, 2022

17C Portraits Head Outside as Mankind Becomes "the Interpreter of Nature"

1694 Jan Weenix (1639-1719) Agneta Block & her family at their summer home Vijverhof or Flora Batavia, with her cultivated pineapple. In this painting, the design & flowers & fruits of the garden are depicted as symbols of the owner's wealth & culture as traditionally were the house, the clothes, or the art collection.

The Renaissance, from the 14-17C, marked a turning point in portraiture. Renaissance artists began to paint secular scenes, breaking away from the dominant religious art of medieval painters. Partly out of interest in the natural world & partly out of nostalgia for classical Greece & Rome, portraits became valued as symbolic & allegorical objects & as depictions of earthly success & status. The period in Europe was the cultural bridge between the Middle Ages & modern history. The relationship between man & nature was evolving as Francis Bacon (1561-1626) promoted man as "the minister & interpreter of nature." Portraits began to depict the wealthy & the middle class in natural landscapes & in more formal garden settings, where man was obviously controlling the nature around him.   As time passed, the Renaissance garden & grounds became as much as symbol of the owner's wealth & culture as his house, his clothes, or his art collection.

With the arrival of Anthony Van Dyck (1599–1641) at the court of Charles I in 1632, British portraiture took a turn toward the baroque that changed the course of British & colonial American painting in the 17-18C. The Elizabethan style had almost been completely replaced in England by the 1670s quickly giving way to a more volumetric style. In the British American colonies, this transition was copied through imported engravings after Peter Lely (1617–1680) & Godfrey Kneller (1648–1723).

This Day in Medieval Garden Myth & Reality


ENLUMINURES EUROPE - VIe - XVIe s. - ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPTS EUROPE

The Harvest of CILIANDRA

June 29 is the 180th day of the Gregorian calendar year Its equivalent was usually the 11th messidor of the French Republican / Revolutionary calendar, officially referred to as CORIANDER DAY.

Tacuum sanitatis, manual of health written circa 1050 by Ibn Butlân (ibn butlân, taqwim es sih- crit 1066), Baghdad Christian doctor and theologian. Date and place of publication: circa 1390-1400, Pavia or Milan (Italy). Illuminated latin manuscript on parchment. National Library of France, Department of Manuscripts, Division of Manuscript Department, Western Division' Rate: New Latin Acquisition 1673

Sunday, June 26, 2022

History Blooms at Thomas Jefferson's Monticello



Monticello's Peggy Cornett tells us that...

On May 28, 1767 Jefferson observed "Snap-dragon" blooming at Shadwell, his childhood home &, four years later, he listed this native of southern Europe among the hardy flowers to be naturalized in a "shrubbery" at Monticello. Jefferson's reference is the earliest known mention of this plant in an American source. The Snapdragons at Monticello came in 1985 through our friendship with the curator of gardens at Hatfield House, a 16C country estate outside London, where the species is naturalized in the landscape. 

Research & images & much more is available directly from the Monticello website - to begin exploring, just click Monticello.org.

Friday, June 24, 2022

Roe v. Wade - US Supreme Court Overturns One Landmark Decision with Another Landmark Decision

This morning, as I was driving to my dog's vet, the radio announced that the United States Supreme Court overturned a nearly 50 year-old landmark decision of that court. I am an old historian, but I remember the announcement of the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision.  Such landmark decisions from the Supreme Court substantially change the interpretation of existing law. I would not have chosen to have an abortion, but I do not want the government to make that decision for me or my daughters or my granddaughters or any other woman.

Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, No. 19-1392, 597 U.S. (2022), is now a landmark decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in which the Court held that the Constitution of the United States does not confer any women the right to abortion, thus overruling both Roe v. Wade (1973) & Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992). Despite Abigail Adams's (1744-1818) famous advice to her husband John Adams (1735-1826) to “remember the ladies,” he & the rest of the founders of our country left any mention of women out of the founding documents. As a result, the U.S. Constitution does not mention women at all. In fact, women did not get the right to vote in national elections until 1920.

The Court issued its new landmark decision this morning -  June 24, 2022. In a 6–3 judgment, the Court reversed the Fifth Circuit's decision & remanded that case for further review. The majority opinion declares that a woman's right to have an abortion was not a protected right under the Constitution, overturning both 1973 Roe & 1992 Casey, & returned decisions regarding abortion regulations back to the states. As a result, Dobbs is considered a landmark decision of the Court.

This decision overlooks stare decisis (Latin for “to stand by things decided”), as it establishes a significant new legal principle for women; overturns prior precedent for women; departs from prior practice for women; & establishes a standard for women that can be applied by courts in future decisions.

On May 2, 2022, Politico released an alleged leaked draft of a majority opinion by Justice Samuel Alito circulated among the justices in February 2022. That draft opinion suggested that the court would overturn 1973 Roe & 1992 Casey. Alito's draft called the Roe decision "egregiously wrong from the start," arguing that a woman's right to have an abortion is not listed in the Constitution as a protected right, & instead would allow individual states to decide on whether a woman could have an abortion & to apply any other restrictions or guarantees on a woman's right under the Tenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.