
Hi all, when I was watching TV I saw one program at the Europe channel and they where talking about the Tulips and I went to the net to find about this wonderful flower ,if u say tulips the first thing that will come to our min is Netherlands so lets all read the History of this flower and know from where did it come?
sometime in the year 1637, a Dutch farmer was in the market for a tulip. Upon finding a bloemist who carried the specific variety of flower that he desired, the farmer entered into negotiations with the flower-seller. When an agreement had been reached, the farmer acquired his flower-bulb. The purchase price that the farmer apparently deemed reasonable for a single tulip-bulb of the Viceroy variety included “two [loads] of wheat and four of rye, four fat oxen, eight pigs, a dozen sheep, two ox heads of wine, four tons of butter, a thousand pounds of cheese, a bed, some clothing and a silver beaker.”1 Such a high price, estimated at approximately 2,500 guilders, for a single tulip was not unusual. During the height of the Dutch ‘tulip mania’ in the seventeenth century, a Semper Augustus, considered to be even more precious than the Viceroy tulip, could bring in close to 6,000 guilders. In fact, tulip prices and the practice of tulip speculation became so excessive and frenzied that in 1637 the States of Holland passed a statute curbin g such extremes
Widely available at modest prices today, tulips are still closely associated with the Netherlands. However, the tulip is not a native Dutch flower. Like many other products in western Europe, such as the potato and tobacco, tulips came to the Netherlands from another part of the world. Not introduced to the Netherlands until 1593, the tulip was first seen by Europeans in Turkey. It was there in 1556 that Busbeq (A.G. Busbequius), the ambassador sent by the Austrian Emperor Ferdinand I to the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, witnessed the flowers growing in the gardens of Adrianople and Constantinople. Scholars now believe that the Turks had been cultivating tulips as early as AD 1000. Most of these tulips probably originated in areas around the Black Sea, in the Crimea, and in the steppes to the north of the Caucasus.
Soon after Ambassador Busbeq noticed the flowers in the Ottoman Empire, tulips became one of the most sought after luxury items in Europe. At first, in the 1560s, trade and diplomatic interaction with the Ottoman Levant allowed for a small number of tulips to be imported into Hapsburg Europe. In this early stage, tulip ownership was primarily limited to wealthy nobles and scholars. Antwerp, Brussels, Augsburg, Paris, and Prague are among some of the cities where such tulips first began to circulate. A key figure in the history of European tulip interest is the famous botanist Carolus Clusius. Clusius, who had achieved great recognition for his work with medicinal herbs in Prague and Vienna, accepted a position as head botanist of the Dutch university in Lei den in the year 1593. Previously, he had met with former Ambassador Busbeq in Vienna and accepted several tulip bulbs and seeds.
At Leiden’s innovative hortus botanicus, or botanical garden, Clusius cultivated the bulbs and seeds and thus introduced the flower to Holland
Through botanical experimentation, Clusius and other horticulturists produced new color variations in tulips. This breeding of tulips with new color combinations had two important effects on the European — primarily Dutch — tulip market. The most elegantly and vividly colored of the new tulips, such as the Semper Augustus, which was white with red flames, became exorbitantly priced. Only the wealthiest aristocrats and merchants could afford these striped hybrid varieties. By the early 1630s, however, flower growers had begun to raise vast crops of more simply-colored tulips. These flowers, such as the Yellow Crown tulips, could be purchased cheaply by even the poorer segments of society. With an ever-growing number of varieties and an ever-widening price range, tulips became one of the few luxury goods that could be purchased by members of all classes
The popularity of the tulip in the Dutch Republic reached its pinnacle in the years 1636-37 during the craze known as ‘tulip mania.’ At this time, the practice of tulip speculation — only relevant to prized varieties of the flower — emerged. Because the flower-growers had to cultivate the bulbs and could not sell them until they were ready, these bloemisten began selling promissory notes guaranteeing the future delivery of the tulip bulb. The buyers of these pieces of paper resold the notes at marked-up prices. In this way, the promissory notes changed hands from buyer to buyer until the tulip became ready for delivery. The key was to be able to resell the note before the tulip could be delivered; the unlucky gambler was the person who could no longer resell the note because he now owned the actual tulip. This Dutch trade in the future promise of tulips became known as the tulpenwindhandel, literally ’tulip wind trade,’ because transactions involved nothing more than air. Many Dutch citizens, angry at such a corruption of the flower market, voiced their opinions on the matter in pamphlets.2 The Dutch government was also concerned and ended the tulpenwindhandel and the era of ‘tulip mania’ by enforcing economic controls in 1637.
Growing trade with non-European economies, the rise in new learning and scientific experimentation, and a boom in the market for luxury goods are all aspects of early modern Europe that are demonstrated in the history of the tulip. Thus, the tulip truly stands out as a cultural symbol of Europe during the time of the flower’s heyday
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so interesting history of this flower I hope all of you liked this topic.
Have A Nice Day
Fatina

14 comments:
Thanks for this, Fatina. I also think tulips are beautiful flowers. Did you know that the word "tulip" is a corruption of "dulbent" or "tulbent", a kind of cloth and also a name given to the turbans worn by the Ottomans, which reminded Western visitors of the flower.
I also love the beautiful pink flowers of bougainvillea, which is very common here (although they have almost no scent) and the overpowering scent of jasmine on a summer evening, which reminds me of previous holidays gaken on the Turkish coast.
Good evening Purple Gallinule (Andrew)
Thank you for your nice comment .
Tulips are the nice flowers with a interesting History
For me I like all the flowers (rose ,tulips)and all.
Me and my friends ,we have at Face Book Web page two groups one is about different kind of flowers and the other is about plants ,I got from them the picture of the tulips that I am putting here.
Have A Nice Day
Fatina
Hi Fatina and all who share an interest in flowers,
This time, Fatina, you set us on a flower-scented journey, that took me to my country which brought back a memory of a special holiday we have every year a week before Easter on which we pay tribute to women bearing names of flowers, like: Tsveta, Rosa, Margarita, Kamelia, Bilyana, Lilia, Temenuga, Nevyana, Ralitza.
Actually, both my sister and I have names of flowers, chosen by my father, who obviously was looking for names that would also have the first letter of my grandparents’ names: my sister was named after my grandfather and me - after my grandmother.
I’ve always found the topic of names interesting and whether the name given to you at birth shapes your life to an extent. I tend to believe in it.
The name may hold a blessing, an idea, like flowers. Flowers carry ideas and a scented blessing. They look incredible in the gardens and field but can only live a very short life when cut from their roots - like an epitome of life: ephemeral but beautiful.
What Arabic names do you have of flowers, by the way?
Here is a poem by one of the Lake District romantic poets William Wordsworth (1770-1850) dedicated to the golden daffodils:
I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud
I wandered lonely as a cloud
That floats on high o'er vales and hills,
When all at once I saw a crowd,
A host, of golden daffodils;
Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.
Continuous as the stars that shine
And twinkle on the milky way,
They stretched in never-ending line
Along the margin of a bay:
Ten thousand saw I at a glance,
Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.
The waves beside them danced; but the
Out-did the sparkling waves in glee:
A poet could not but be gay,
In such a jocund company:
I gazed--and gazed--but little thought
What wealth the show to me had brought:
For oft, when on my couch I lie
In vacant or in pensive mood,
They flash upon that inward eye
Which is the bliss of solitude;
And then my heart with pleasure fills,
And dances with the daffodils
What do you think of the poem?
We can actually discuss it in Free Pharaoh’s thread as well but from a different perspective: that of loneliness and solitude.
Dancing and fluttering regards,
ralitza
Hi
i don't know why you don,t choose the important arabic flower like :Arabian Jasmine,jasmin,white pink,wild iris,dried lily
they have a buetifull smell and look.
they symbol for purity and loyality.
Good evening teacher
Thank you for your nice comment all the flowers are nice and sweet and if a girl is named after a Flower that will be so sweet we have in Arab countries girls named after some flowers in my country they named girls like
Dalia , Jasmine, Narjis and Lily ithink that it is a very interesting topic about names because we are trying to find one name for my sister baby, we are trying to chouse from Dalia it’s a nice pink flower or Dana it’s the big peril or Dania
These 3 name we put and trying to see witch of them will be her name when she will come at the end of this month .
My niece is called leena it means the tiny palm tree there is a lot of nice and interesting meanings in names .
Can any one in the class write for as any interning names and there meaning ?
Nice poem I liked it
Take care & have a nice day
Fatina
Hi walid
I choused the Tulip flower because it has a interesting History and it’s the most
Beautiful flower .
About the other flowers that u told as they are not Arabic flowers
You can find them in all around the would like Jasmine , Lily and Dalia and others
OK because you told as about some flowers walid why don’t you give as the history of these flowers ? we will be all waiting for that.
Fatina
Hi fatina
i hope when you read this comment you feel fine.
if you want to know history any planet that i wrote about them just enetr google website and search the history of planet that you want it and you will fine ahat you want
please click this link
http://toptropicals.com/html/toptropicals/articles/shrubs/jasmin_facts.htm
The modest Rose puts forth a thorn,
The humble sheep a threat'ning horn:
While the Lily white shall in love delight,
Nor a thorn nor a threat stain her beauty bright.
Hi walid
You didn’t understand what I have writhed, I know how to get any information that I need to know from the net that’s easy thing to get, but I wanted you to write for as that information because you where telling as about the other flowers that was the meaning of what I have said.
I can give you a lot of web pages one of them we and my friends mead for flowers and plants.
Fatina
Hi Fatina and everybody else who is interested in the topic of flowers,
If you want to learn more about some typical flowers in Vietnam and see photos of them, check out the bbc student blog for this month and read the student's post entitled "Summer and flowers"
I've provided a link to the blog in the sidebar.
Enjoy,
ralitza
Hi teacher
thank you for the web page iwill see it
good night
Fatina
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