Man and the Natural World: Changing Attitudes in England 1500–1800

Man and the Natural World by Keith Thomas

Man and the natural world. Changing attitudes in England 1500–1800 by historian Keith Thomas was originally published in Great Britain by Allen Lane in 1983.

Outline

Children with cat and cage-bird, 1742. The bird is probably a goldfinch.

Footnotes

All page numbers refer to the Penguin paperback 1984 edition.

  1. Canaries had been imported annually by the thousand since the mid-16th century (p. 111).
  2. In the 16th century 89 new species of trees and shrubs came into England, 131 in the 17th, 445 in the 18th, 699 in the first 30 years of the 19th century (p. 211). Examples: Lebanon cedar, false acacia, horse chestnut, lime, Lombardy poplar, Weymouth pine, Laburnum, Philadelphus, Lilac, Hydrangea, Buddleia and Rhododendron.
  3. In 1500 there were perhaps 200 kinds of cultivated plant in England. In 1839 the figure was 18,000 (p. 226). Examples: tulips, hyacinths, anemones, crocuses, lupins, phlox, dahlias, fuchsia.
  4. In 1847 the Vegetarian Society of Great Britain was founded, but 50 years later its membership was still only 5,000 (p. 297).
  5. p. 303. These are the closing lines of the book.

Editions

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