'My object is to give a peep into the Celestial Empire, to show its strange hills and romantic valleys, its rivers and canals and its strange and interesting people.' Robert Fortune (1813 80), the author of several books on China, was a keen botanist. He first went to China for the Royal Horticultural Society, but soon returned on behalf of the East India Company in order to collect tea specimens for the British government's plantations in the Himalayas. In this entertaining account, first published in 1852, Fortune includes stories of how he disguised himself in Chinese clothes to gain...
'My object is to give a peep into the Celestial Empire, to show its strange hills and romantic valleys, its rivers and canals and its strange and inte...
First published in 1847, this is an important description of what were then little-known parts of China by the botanist Robert Fortune (1812 80). Son of a hedger, Fortune rose to be one of the most famous gardeners, botanists and plant hunters of his day, making several visits to China to bring out commercially important plants, especially tea for introduction to British India, and ornamental plants (many now bearing the name fortunei) which were enthusiastically taken up by Victorian gardeners. His three years in China took him to areas newly open to Europeans after Chinese defeat in the...
First published in 1847, this is an important description of what were then little-known parts of China by the botanist Robert Fortune (1812 80). Son ...
When Scottish botanist Robert Fortune (1812 80) travelled to Japan in 1860, shortly after it had reopened to foreign visitors for the first time in centuries, he found the islands to be both mysterious and dangerous. This work, first published in 1863, is Fortune's spirited account of his travels, from Nagasaki to Yedo (modern-day Tokyo) and then on to Peking (Beijing). Fortune had previously spent several years in China researching tea plants and tea-growing technology, which he later introduced to the plantations of India. (His books on his experiences in China are also reissued in the...
When Scottish botanist Robert Fortune (1812 80) travelled to Japan in 1860, shortly after it had reopened to foreign visitors for the first time in ce...