首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
In the 1350s poor countrymen began to have cottages and gardens which they could call their own. Were these fourteenth-century p
In the 1350s poor countrymen began to have cottages and gardens which they could call their own. Were these fourteenth-century p
admin
2015-01-09
37
问题
In the 1350s poor countrymen began to have cottages and gardens which they could call their own. Were these fourteenth-century peasants,then,the originators of the cottage garden? Not really:the making and planting of small mixed gardens had been pioneered by others,and the cottager had at least two good examples which he could follow. His garden plants might and to some extent did come from the surrounding countryside,but a great many came from the monastery gardens. As to the general plan of the small garden,in so far as it had one at all,that had its origin not in the country,but in the town.
The first gardens to be developed and planted by the owners or tenants of small houses town cottages as it were,were almost certainly those of the suburbs of the free cities of Italy and Germany in the early Middle Ages. Thus the suburban garden,far from being a descendant of the country cottage garden, is its ancestor,and older,in all probability,by about two centuries. On the face of it a paradox,in fact this is really logical enough:it was in such towns that there first emerged a class of man who was free and who,without being rich,owned his own small houses craftsman or tradesman protected by his guild from the great barons,and from the petty ones too. Moreover.it was in the towns,rather than in the country, where the countryside provided herbs and even wild vegetables,that men needed to cultivate pot-herbs and salads. It was also in the towns that there existed a demand for market-garden produce.
London lagged well behind the Italian,Flemish,German and French free cities in this bourgeois progress towards the freedom of having a garden;yet,as early as the thirteenth century,well before the Black Death,Fitz Steven,biographer of Thomas a Becket, was writing that,in London: "On all sides outside the house of the citizens who dwell in the suburbs there are adjoining gardens planted with trees, both spacious and pleasing to the sight".
Then there is the monastery garden,quoted often as a "source" of the cottage garden in innumerable histories of gardening. The gardens of the great religious establishments of the eighth and ninth centuries had two origins:St. Augustine,copying the Greek academe did his teaching in a small garden presented to him for that purpose by a rich friend:thus the idea of a garden-school,which began among the Greek philosopher-teachers,was carried on by the Christian church. In the second place,since one of the charities undertaken by most religious orders was that of healing,monasteries and nunneries needed a garden of medicinal herbs. Such physic gardens were soon supplemented by vegetable,salad and fruit gardens in those monasteries which enjoined upon their members the duty of raising their own food,or at least a part of it. They tended next to develop,willy-nilly into flower gardens simply because many of the herbaceous plants grown for medicinal purposes,or for their fragrance as strewing herbs,had pretty flowers— for example,violets,marjoram,pinks,primroses,madonna lilies and roses. In due course these flowers came to be grown for their own sakes,especially since some of them. Lilies and roses notably,had a ritual or religious significance of their own. The madonna lily had been Aphrodite’s symbolic flower.it became Mary’s;yet its first association with horticulture was economic;a salve or ointment was made from the bulb.
Much earlier than is commonly realized,certain monastic gardeners were making remarkable progress in scientific horticulture—for example,in forcing flowers and fruit out of season in cloister and courtyard gardens used as conservatories—which had lessons to teach cottagers as well as castle-dwellers.
What cottage gardeners could learn from the monasteries was_____.
选项
A、how to control growth by special conditions
B、the need for earlier planting
C、how to choose the best plants for that climate
D、the need for sheltered conditions
答案
D
解析
题目问:从寺院那里,城堡园丁学到了什么?通过文章内容可知,某些寺院从事园艺的人,早在人们普遍意识到这点之前,就在科学地从事园艺方面取得了很大的进步。举例来说,把修道院和寺院的花园改作暖房,从而使花朵的生长不受时节的限制。这不仅启发了居民,而且也启发了居住在城堡中的人,使他们从中得到了学习。所以,答案是D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/P6JYFFFM
0
考博英语
相关试题推荐
Itwasnotuntilshereturnedhome______sherealizedshehadalmostwastedtenofhervaluablehours.
Inmanycountriestobaccoandmedicinearegovernment______.
DuringthefirstyearthatMr.WordsworthandIwereneighbours,ourconversationsturnedfrequentlyonthetwocardinalpoints
Afterfailinghismid-termexams,Jeremywas______facehisparents.
Mostpeoplewouldbe【71】bythehighqualityofmedicine【72】tomostAmericans.Thereisalotofspecialization,agreatdealof【
Mostpeoplewouldbe【71】bythehighqualityofmedicine【72】tomostAmericans.Thereisalotofspecialization,agreatdealof【
Mostpeoplewouldbe【71】bythehighqualityofmedicine【72】tomostAmericans.Thereisalotofspecialization,agreatdealof【
Mostpeoplewouldbe【71】bythehighqualityofmedicine【72】tomostAmericans.Thereisalotofspecialization,agreatdealof【
Inthe1350spoorcountrymenbegantohavecottagesandgardenswhichtheycouldcalltheirown.Werethesefourteenth-centuryp
随机试题
A.血管内支架技术B.球囊血管成形术C.激光血管成形术D.粥样斑块切除术E.使用同轴导管行血管成形术1974年Gruentzig发明
陈先生,52岁,朋友聚餐后,出现脐周阵发性腹痛,并有腹胀、呕吐、肛门停止排气,去年曾做过阑尾切除术,诊断为单纯性粘连性肠梗阻。与上述诊断相符的体征是
(2017年第6题)图示结构正确的弯矩图是()。
下列各纳税人中,集中在北京缴纳企业所得税的是( )。
为什么奥苏贝尔认为发现学习不应该成为学生学习的主要方式?
班主任在班级管理体制中的领导影响力主要表现在两个方面:一是职权影响力;二是()。
【2015.黑龙江鸡西】教师积极健康的情绪是教师心理健康的最重要标志。()
下列哪一选项是蚊子用于获取“猎物”信息的主要器官:
数据仓库中的数据组织是基于__________模型的。
A、Becausetherewerealotofchoicesforwomen.B、Becauseshehappenedtobeofferedthechance.C、Becausebeingalibrarianis
最新回复
(
0
)