An Environmental History of Wildlife in England 1650-1950

(Elle) #1

(^208) noTes
6 D. J. Rackham, ‘The introduction of the black rat into Britain’, Antiquity 53
(1979), 112–20. O. Rackham, History of the Countryside (London: Dent,
1986), pp. 46–7.
7 W. Johnson (ed.), Gilbert White’s Journal (London: Routledge, 1931), p. 146.
8 R. Mabey, The Unofficial Countryside (London: Pimlico, 1999), p. 29.
9 R. Mabey, Weeds: the story of outlaw plants (London: Profile Books, 2010).
10 B. N. K. Davis, ‘Wildlife, urbanisation and industry’, Biological Conservation
10 (1976), 249–91. J. Box, ‘Conserving or greening? The challenge of post-
industrial landscapes’, British Wildlife 4 (1993), 273–79.
11 http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20110303145213/http:/ukbap.org.
uk/library/UKBAPPriorityHabitatDescriptionsRevised20100730.pdf
12 T. Turner, English Garden Design: history and styles since 1650 (Woodbridge:
Antique Collector’s Club, 1986). M. Hadfield, A History of British Gardening
(London: Penguin, 1985), pp. 103–78. J. Dixon Hunt and E. de Jong (eds), The
Anglo-Dutch Garden in the Age of William and Mary, published as Journal of
Garden History 8, 2&3 (1988). T. Williamson, Polite Landscapes: gardens and
society in eighteenth-century England (Stroud: Sutton, 1995), pp. 24–31.
13 T. Williamson, The Archaeology of the Landscape Park: landscape design in
Norfolk, England 1680-1840 (Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, British
Series, vol. 268, 1998), pp. 33–4.
14 M. Campbell-Culver, The Origins of Plants (London: Headline Books, 2001),
pp. 120–67.
15 O. Rackham, Woodlands (London: Collins, 2006), p. 363.
16 A natural cross between the natives Tilia cordata and T. platyphyllos, but
seldom planted in the working countryside.
17 J. Freeman (ed.), Thomas Fuller: the Worthies of England (London, 1952),
p. 523. East Suffolk Record Office 942.64 Som.
18 Williamson, Polite Landscapes, pp. 31–5.
19 T. Williamson, ‘Fish, fur and feather: man and nature in the post-medieval
landscape’, in K. Barker and T. Darvill (eds), Making English Landscapes
(Bournemouth: Bournemouth University School of Conservation Sciences
Occasional Paper, 1997), pp. 92–117. M. Barley, ‘Rural buildings in England’,
in J. Thirsk (ed.), The Agrarian History of England and Wales. Volume 5.2:
1640-1750 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985), pp. 590–685.
20 C. Currie, ‘Fish ponds as garden features’, Garden History 18, 1 (1990),
22–33.
21 G. Isham, Rushton Triangular Lodge (London: HMSO, 1970).
22 P. Everson, ‘Quarrendon, Aylesbury Vale, Buckinghamshire’. Unpublished
report for English Heritage (Swindon, 1999), p. 50.
23 Hertfordshire Archives and Local Studies XIII.30.
24 J. Barnatt and T. Williamson, Chatsworth: a landscape history (Macclesfield,
2005), pp. 32–4, 44. W. Senior, Lees and Edensor (1617), maps in bound
volume of early seventeenth-century surveys, Chatsworth Archives,
Chatsworth House, Derbyshire.

Free download pdf