I seem to be buying tulips almost every week. I do love them and they appear to be increasingly ubiquitous and incredibly varied. This has aroused in me a certain curiosity about their back story, their history, and in researching that story, I have uncovered a veritable flower garden of delightful tulip information. This is a partial history because the full history I suspect, would fill at least one book!
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| Fields of tulips in Lisse, Netherlands |
Tulips were originally found, growing wild, in the landscape stretching from Southern Europe to Central Asia, and thus, in their natural state, they were at home on steppes and in mountainous areas in temperate climates. But, since the seventeenth century, they have become widely naturalized and cultivated. Flowering in the Spring, they become dormant in the summer once the flowers and leaves have died back, emerging above ground as a shoot from the underground bulb in early Spring.
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| Semper Augustus antique drawing. See below. |
The Persian and Turkish peoples were the first to cultivate tulips, as early as in tenth century Persia, and tulips were certainly growing in Iranian gardens by the tenth century while, by the fifteenth century, they were among the most prized of flowers, becoming the national symbol of the later Ottomans. Although tulips were cultivated in Byzantine Constantinople as early as 1055, they did not come to the attention of Northern Europeans until the sixteenth century when diplomats to the Ottoman court observed,and reported on, them. Although it is unknown who first brought the tulip to North-western Europe, the most widely accepted story is that it was Oghier Ghislain de Busbecq, an ambassador for Emperor Ferdinand 1 to Suleyman the Magnificent. According to a letter, he saw "an abundance of flowers everywhere; Narcissus, hyacinths, and those in Turkish called Lale, much to our astonishment because it was almost midwinter, a season unfriendly to flowers."
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| Keukenhof Gardens |
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| Loudon's Hortus Botanicus Catalogue of all plants indigenous, cultivated in, or introduced to Britain. |
Tulips spread rapidly across Europe during the sixteenth century, and more opulent varieties such as double tulips, were already known in Europe by the early 17th century. These curiosities fitted well in an age when natural oddities in many fields, were cherished especially in the Netherlands, France, Germany and England, where the spice trade with the East Indies had made many people wealthy. Nouveaux riches seeking status through wealthy tulip displays, embraced the exotic plant market, especially in the Low Countries where gardens had become expensively fashionable.
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| Srinagar Tulip Gardens in Pakistan; Asia's largest display of tulips. |
Iran.
The word for tulip in Persian is ‘laleh’ and this has become
popular as a girl’s name and is also used to name commercial enterprises such as the
Laleh International Hotel and in public facilities such as Laleh Park and Laleh
Hospital.
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| Persian tulip fields. |
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| Ayatollah Ruhollah Khameni |
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| Ottowa Tulip Festival |
Introduction to Canada.
During WW2, from 1941-1943, Seymour Cobley of the Royal Horticultural Society, donated 83,000 tulip bulbs to Canada to honour Canadian involvement in the war. In 1945, the Dutch Royal Family sent 100,000 bulbs to Ottawa in gratitude for Canadians having sheltered the future Queen Juliana and her family for the preceding three years during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. In 1946 Juliana sent another 20,500 bulbs for a hospital display with a promise to send 10,000 more tulip bulbs each year. These generous tulip donations triggered the establishment of the Ottowa Tulip Festival which, by 1963, featured the inclusion of more than 2 million tulips, rising to nearly 3 million by 1995.
Addendum.
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| Semper Augustus tulip |
The Semper Augustus tulip could lay claim to a certain fame during the early seventeenth century. The beginning of the Dutch Golden Age saw unprecedented levels of prosperity through trade, and with strong disposable incomes, merchants and other nouveaux riches, in particular, sought ways to display their wealth but strictly within the Protestant value of modesty. Tulips, relatively recent arrivals, were much sought after for their novelty and beauty with the added charm for the elite, that the rarest, were expensive. The discreet Semper Augustus with its small scale flamboyance in petals and its high cost, presented a perfect but discreet example.
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| Vintage tulipiere vase. One of many designed specifically for exhibiting tulips to advantage. |
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