Saturday, 8 May 2010
The French Connection
I planted out some Brussel Sprouts the other day, bought from the garden centre. One type was Brolin which I put in last year and were excellent, and another type, which caught my eye because it was an earlier maturing variety, called Breton.
As you may have seen from my previous blogs, I’m always on the look out for those little curiosities that can turn up whilst digging. Occasionally I have dug up things that look like coins but disappointingly never are, sometimes it’s a stone and other times it’s been a button. Well this time, whilst dibbling a hole for a sprout plant, the real thing turned up.
Here’s a shot of it still in the soil.(Click photo to enlarge)
This is it cleaned.
After a bit of research it turns out to be a 17th century French coin, issued during the reign of Louis the 14th. You can just make out the denomination, a Liard de France. Unfortunately, you can’t see the date, but by style it falls somewhere between 1650 and 1700.
Now back to the connection bit. It happened to be one of the Breton variety that I was planting at the time. OK, I know that’s a bit tenuous to say the least, and I could well have been planting out French Beans or sowing early Nantes carrots I suppose, however there’s more.
It seems that old Louis was more than just interested in gardens and loved his vegetables. So much so that he had The Potager du Roi (fr: Kitchen Garden of the King) created near the palace of Versaille, to supply the King's court. A massive enterprise covering 25 acres, “it required thirty experienced gardeners to tend to the garden plots, greenhouses, and the twelve thousand trees”(full Wikipedia article here), to supply the King’s court.
The Potager du Roi.
Now that's what you call an allotment.
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oh I have always wanted to dig us something exciting like this! And how interesting too about The Potager Du Roi, although my little plot is proving enough just now ;0D
ReplyDeleteBack in the 90s I visited Versailles and the gardens, a wonderful place. Would like to go back because back then I wasn't into gardening at all. Love the last photo too btw!
Green Jeannie
Keep your eyes peeled Jeannie, you never know. Though I did once read of a 2nd W.W. bomb turning up on an allotment :-(
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