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Jill, Duchess of Hamilton (1940–2018)

Auteur van The Gardens of William Morris

15 Werken 206 Leden 1 Geef een beoordeling

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Fotografie: pressreader.com

Werken van Jill, Duchess of Hamilton

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Algemene kennis

Gangbare naam
Duchess of Hamilton, Jill,
Pseudoniemen en naamsvarianten
Robertson, Jillian (birth name)
Hamilton, Jill
Duchess of Hamilton and Brandon, Jill Douglas-Hamilton,
Geboortedatum
1940-01-30
Overlijdensdatum
2018-04-22
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
UK
Australia (birth)
Geboorteplaats
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Plaats van overlijden
Oxford, England, UK
Woonplaatsen
Jerusalem
Townsville, Queensland, Australia
Chelsea, London, England, UK
Haddington, East Lothian, Scotland, UK
France
Monte Carlo, Monaco
Opleiding
School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
Beroepen
reporter
conservationist
duchess
Relaties
Duke of Hamilton, Angus Alan Douglas Douglas-Hamilton, (former spouse)
Korte biografie
Jill, Duchess of Hamilton, (1940-2018) was born Jillian Robertson in Sydney, Australia, and trained as a newspaper journalist. She was sent to London as a correspondent for the Murdoch press, and other assignments took her to the USA, India, Russia, Tahiti, Vietnam, and Afghanistan. She interviewed prominent figures such as were Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi, the Dalai Lama, Marlon Brando, Richard Burton, Nancy Mitford and P.G. Wodehouse.
Jill's first marriage was to Edward A.S. Hulton. In 1988, she married Angus Alan Douglas Douglas-Hamilton, 15th Duke of Hamilton and 12th Duke of Brandon, premier peer of Scotland. The couple divorced in 1995.
Jill wrote numerous books, including The Captain Cook Myth (1980); Scottish Plants for Scottish Gardens (1996); English Plants for English Gardens (2000); The Early Discovery of Australian Garden Plants (1998); The Gardens of William Morris (1998); Napoleon, the Empress and the Artist (1999); Redouté’s Flowers (2001); and God, Guns and Israel (2004).
In 2004, Jill enrolled at the School of Oriental and African Studies at London University and earned a master's degree in Near and Middle Eastern Studies. She went on to work on a PhD. Late in life, Jill spent several months each year in Jerusalem and was a frequent contributor to The Catholic Herald.

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I must say that I'm suspicious of any author who styles herself as a Duchess That seems to be totally irrelevant to the authorship of this book. But Jill, Duchess of Hamilton, as she liked to be known, certainly had some significant writing skills and experience behind her as a journalist. (And she married a Scottish Duke (among others) ...hence the title). The second author sounds suitably academic to have contributed in a major way to this publication.....a Geology major working on the Joseph Banks Archive Project at the Natural history Museum in London. Anyway, my suspicions, aside the two of them have done a reasonable job of putting some history behind the collection and naming of the Australia flora by Europeans. And one thing stands out: the British were very slack in engaging with the flora of Australia in any systematic way. the French had published a sizeable volume about Australian plants in 1804 by Labillardiere but the British had nothing even comparable until George Bentham published Flora Australiensis in the 1870's. (By this time my own ancestors were well established in Australia).
The book is titled "the Flower Chain" and is written as if all the small contributions added together to initially establish a chain of linkages with Europe and eventually a whole interlinked network. Some characters of particular significance are Joseph Banks. Despite his reputation as a bit of a dilettante he really seems to have been a major force behind much of the systemic collection and knowledge about Australian (and other ) plants. I was also impressed with Bank's role in having Ferdinand Bauer (artist) and Robert Brown (botanist and discoverer of Brownian motion) as part of the complement of people travelling with Flinders on the Investigator. Both pretty impressive people and great contributors. Ferdinand Bauer was amazing. He took countless sketches and noted the colouration against his set of 999 "standard colours" so he could later paint the subject accurately. And he did it with astonishing accuracy....even where colours merge fro one into another. (See the publication "Painting by Numbers").
Lots of interesting illustrations and lots of interesting history. (I didn't know that William Dampier was one of the first significant collectors of plants from North Western Australia. Also the sheer difficulty of keeping plants alive when they were subject to salt spray and scorching heat etc on the long voyages back to Europe). Some interesting stuff about the important role the Empress Josephine played with her garden at Malmaison in introducing and reproducing plants in Europe. She also employed the illustrator Redoute ...I saw his famous rose paintings in Japan. He was a very good painter....and obviously prolific.
In some ways, it's a bit disjointed as a narrative. But that kind of comes with the reality of the growth in knowledge about Australian Flora. (Generally ignored by governors in the colony who were most concerned with survival and didn't really see the native plants as offering anything of value).
Four stars from me.
… (meer)
 
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booktsunami | Jul 11, 2021 |

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Statistieken

Werken
15
Leden
206
Populariteit
#107,332
Waardering
3.9
Besprekingen
1
ISBNs
28
Talen
2

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