The Essential Aromatherapy Garden. Julia Lawless
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HarperCollinsPublishers
1 London Bridge Street
London SE1 9GF
First published by Kyle Cathie Ltd in 2001
This edition first published by HarperCollinsPublishers in 2019
Copyright © HarperCollinsPublishers
Text copyright © Julia Lawless 2001, 2019
Cover and interior design by Pete Clayman
Cover photography by iStock.com
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
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Source ISBN 978-0-00-832328-8
Ebook ISBN 9780008351854
Version 2019-02-21
CONTENTS
Sue Minter, Chelsea Physic Garden
The History of the Scented Garden
Aromatic Herbs for Health & Cooking
A Perfumery & Aromatherapy Border
4
Fragrant Exotica & Container Plants
5
Secrets From the Still Room
6
Planning an Aromatherapy Garden
7
Aromatherapy Plant Portraits
Searchable Terms
Credits and Resources
About the Publisher
Perfume has the most extraordinary power to affect emotion and mood. It can also stimulate memory in ways varying from the intimate and nostalgic to the downright disagreeable. And most of this is based on the essential oils derived from plants, or synthesised in imitation of what they produce naturally.
Entire civilisations such as that of ancient Egypt (and, to some extent, medieval France) have based their religious and social functioning around perfume. In Britain, the importance of the aromatic in medieval times (when scent was thought to be the main defence against disease) seems to be reemerging in the greater and greater desire for perfumed products used in the household, in health care and, of course, in the garden.
I am therefore delighted that Julia Lawless has written this practical guide to growing and using scented plants while placing their use in a sound historical context.
It is also good to know that any encouragement of the essential oil industry supports the economics of countries such as China, Brazil, Turkey, Indonesia, India, Morocco and Egypt. And, unlike medicinal herbs (the vast majority of which are taken from the wild), these materials are cropped, making their use far less of a conservation concern.
I wish the reader joy in the creation of a scented haven. May it stimulate many happy memories!
Sue Minter
CURATOR, CHELSEA PHYSIC GARDEN
Medicinal plants have been grown at Chelsea Physic Garden since the seventeenth century. Today there are displays of over 400 medicinal species.
Deryck Dillon Premium
I have been working in the field of aromatherapy and medical herbalism for more than forty years, and over the past three decades I have been fortunate enough to have also had the opportunity to create several aromatic gardens. Growing scented plants and herbs has brought the whole field of aromatic medicine vividly to life for me and has helped enrich my understanding and transform it from simply one of theory into a direct experience of the inherent nature of the plants themselves.