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Jardin des plantes

The Jardin des plantes (French for "Garden of the Plants"), also known as the Jardin des plantes de Paris (French: [ʒaʁdɛ̃ plɑ̃t paʁi]) when distinguished from other jardins des plantes in other cities, is the main botanical garden in France. The term Jardin des plantes is the official name in the present day, but it is in fact an elliptical form of Jardin royal des plantes médicinales ("Royal Garden of the Medicinal Plants"), which is related to the original purpose of the garden back in the 17th century.

Jardin des plantes
Jardin des plantes
The exterior of the Grande galerie de l'Évolution ('Gallery of Evolution'). Drawing plans by architect Louis-Jules André, 1889, when it still was named Galerie de Zoologie ('Gallery of Zoology').
Location within Paris
Established1635 (1635)
LocationParis, France
Coordinates48°50′38″N 2°21′35″E / 48.84396°N 2.35960°E / 48.84396; 2.35960
Typebotanical garden
Visitors1,586,450[1]
Public transit accessJussieu
Austerlitz
Muséum national d'histoire naturelle network

Headquarters of the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle (National Museum of Natural History), the Jardin des plantes is situated in the 5th arrondissement, Paris, on the left bank of the river Seine, and covers 28 hectares (280,000 m2). Since 24 March 1993,[2] the entire garden and its contained buildings, archives, libraries, greenhouses, ménagerie (a zoo), works of art, and specimens' collection are classified as a national historical landmark in France (labelled monument historique).

Garden plan edit

The grounds of the Jardin des plantes include four buildings containing exhibited specimens. These buildings are officially considered as museums following the French law (they are labelled musée de France) and the French Museum of Natural History calls them galeries (French for 'galleries'):

  • The grande galerie de l'Évolution ('Gallery of Evolution') was inaugurated in 1889 as the galerie de Zoologie ('Gallery of Zoology'). In 1994, the gallery was renamed with its current name, grande galerie de l'Évolution, and its exhibited specimens were completely reorganised so that the visitor is oriented by the common thread of the evolution as the major subject treated by the gallery.
  • The galerie de Minéralogie et de Géologie ('Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology'), a mineralogy museum, built as of 1833, inaugurated in 1837.
  • The galerie de Paléontologie et d'Anatomie comparée ('Gallery of Paleontology and Comparative Anatomy'), a comparative anatomy museum in the ground floor and a paleontology museum in the first and second floors. The building was inaugurated in 1898.
  • The galerie de Botanique ('Gallery of Botany'), inaugurated in 1935 thanks to funds provided by the Rockefeller Foundation, contains botany laboratories and the French Muséum's National Herbarium (the biggest in the world with a collection of almost 8 million samples of plants). The building also contains a small permanent exhibition about botany.[citation needed]

In addition to the gardens and the galleries, there is also a small zoo, the ménagerie du Jardin des plantes, founded in 1795 by Bernardin de Saint-Pierre from animals of the ménagerie royale de Versailles, the menagerie at Versailles, which was dismantled during the French Revolution.[citation needed]

The Jardin des plantes maintains a botanical school, which trains botanists, constructs demonstration gardens, and exchanges seeds to maintain biotic diversity. About 4,500 plants are arranged by family on a one hectare (10,000 m2) plot. Three hectares are devoted to horticultural displays of decorative plants. An Alpine garden has 3,000 species with world-wide representation. Specialized buildings, such as a large Art Deco winter garden, and Mexican and Australian hothouses display regional plants, not native to France. The Rose Garden, created in 1990, has hundreds of species of roses and rose trees.[citation needed]

 
Jardin des plantes de Paris

History edit

The Royal Garden of Medicinal Plants edit

 
The garden in 1636

The garden was formally founded in 1635 as the Royal Garden of Medicinal Plants by an edict of King Louis XIII. The garden was put under the authority of the Physician of the king, Guy de la Brosse. It was staffed by a group of "demonstrateurs", who lectured visitors, particularly future physicians and pharmacists, on botany, chemistry, and geology, illustrated by the garden collections.[3]

In 1673, under Louis XIV, and his new royal physician and director of the Garden, Guy-Crescent Fagon, great-nephew of Guy de la Brosse, the garden was given a new amphitheater, where dissections and other medical courses were conducted. The lecturers included the celebrated physician and anatomist Claude Perrault, who was equally famous as the architect; he designed the facade of the Louvre Palace.

In the early 18th century, the chateau was given an additional floor to house the collections the royal botanist's medicinal plant collection. This section was gradually turned into galleries to display the royal collection of minerals. At the same time, the greenhouses on the west and south were enlarged, to hold the plants brought back to France by numerous scientific expeditions around the world. New plants were studied, dried, and cataloged. A group of artists made Herbiers, books with detailed illustrations of each new plant, and the plants of the collection were carefully studied for their possible medical or culinary uses.[4] One example was the group of coffee plants brought from Java to Paris, which were raised and studied by Antoine de Jussieu for their possible medical and commercial use. His studies led to the plantation of coffee in the French colonies of North America.[5]

The Buffon period (1739–1788) edit

The most celebrated head of the garden was Georges-Louis Leclerc, who served as its head from 1739 until his death in 1788. While director of the garden, he also owned and operated a large and successful iron works and foundry in Burgundy, but lived in the garden, in the house that now carries his name. Buffon was responsible for doubling the size of the garden, expanding down to the banks of Seine. He enlarged the Cabinet of Natural History in the main building, and added a new gallery to the south. He also brought into the scientific community of the garden a team of important botanists and naturalists, including Jean Baptiste Lamarck, author of one of the earliest theories of Evolution,[6]

Under the sponsorship of Buffon, explorers and botanists were sent to different corners of the world to collect specimens for garden and museum. Michel Adanson was sent to Senegal, and the navigator La Perouse to the islands of the Pacific. They returned with shiploads of specimens, which were carefully studied and classified. This research caused a conflict between the scientists of Royal Gardens and the professors of the Sorbonne over the question of Evolution. The scientists, led by Buffon and his followers, claimed that natural species gradually evolved, while the theologians of the Sorbonne insisted that nature was exactly as it was at the time of the Creation. Since the scientists had the backing of the Royal court, they were able to continue their studies and publish their work.[7]

The French Revolution and the 19th Century – The Menagerie edit

On June 7, 1793, in the course of the French Revolution, the new government, the National Convention, ordered a complete transformation of the former royal institutions. They created a new Museum of Arts and Techniques, transformed the Louvre from a royal residence to a museum of art, and joined the Royal Garden of Plants and the Cabinet of Natural Sciences together into a single organization: the Museum of Natural History. It also received a number of important collections which had belonged to members of the aristocracy, such as a famous group of wax models illustrating anatomy which had been created by André Pinson.[8]

The Museum and gardens also benefited from the 1798 expedition launched by First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte to Egypt; the military force was accompanied by one hundred and fifty-four botanists, astronomers, archeologists, chemists, artists and other scholars, including Gaspard Monge, Joseph Fourier, and Claude Louis Berthollet. Drawings and paintings of their findings are found in the collections of the Natural History Museum.[8]

The holdings today include 6,963 specimens of the herbarium collection of Joseph Tournefort, donated on his death to the Jardin du Roi.[9]

The major addition to the garden in the late 18th century was the Ménagerie du Jardin des plantes. It was proposed in 1792 by Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, the intendant of the gardens, in large part to rescue the animals of the royal menagerie at the Palace of Versailles, who had been largely abandoned during the Revolution. The Duke of Orleans had a similar private zoo, also abandoned. At the same time the government of the Convention ordered the seizure of all the animals put on public display by various circuses in Paris. In 1795, the government acquired the Hôtel de Magné, the large estate of a French nobleman next to the gardens, and installed the large cages that had housed the animals at Versailles. It went through a very difficult early period, when the majority of the animals died, before it was given sufficient funding and more suitable structures by Napoleon. It became the home of animals brought back to France in scientific expeditions in the early 19th century, including a famous giraffe given to King Charles X by the Sultan of Cairo in 1827.[10]

On 25 August 1944, Allied American troops (2nd DB) were stationed here for the night after the Liberation of Paris from Nazi Germany.[11]

Late 19th–20th century – additions and experiments edit

Throughout the 19th and early 20th century, the primary mission of the gardens and museums was research. Working in the laboratories there, the chemist Eugene Chevreul first isolated fatty acids and cholesterol, and studied the chemistry of vegetal dyes. The physiologist Claude Bernard studied the functions of the glycogen in the liver. In 1896, the physicist Henri Becquerel, working in a laboratory in the museum, discovered radioactivity. He wrapped uranium salts together with an unexposed photographic plate wrapped in black cloth, to keep out the sunlight. When he unwrapped them, the photographic plate had changed color from exposure to the radiation. He received the Nobel Prize in 1903 for his discovery.[12]

The Gallery of Paleontology and of Comparative Anatomy was opened in 1898, replacing structures built between 1795 and 1807, to contain and display the thousands of skeletons the museum had collected. The buildings of menagerie were also expanded, with the construction of immense Bird House, by architect Jules André, 12 meters high, 37 meters long and 25 meters long,[13]

The appearance of the gardens changed in late 19th and early 20th century with the construction of new buildings. In 1877, the gallery of zoology, the landmark building that overlooks the formal garden, designed by Jules André, was begun. It was built to contain the immense zoological collections of the museum; the central hall is a landmark of iron construction, comparable to the Grand Palais and the Musée d'Orsay. It was inaugurated in 1888, but thereafter suffered from a long lack of maintenance. It was closed in 1965, In the 1980s, a new home was found for the museum's gigantic collections. The Zoothêque, was constructed between 1980 and 1986 underneath the Esplanade Milne-Edwards, directly in front of the Gallery of Zoology. It is accessible only to researchers, and contains the thirty million specimens of insects, five hundred thousand fish and reptiles, one hundred fifty thousand birds, and seven thousand other animals. The building above underwent a major renovation from 1991 to 1994, to house the updated Grand Gallery of Evolution.[12]

National Museum of Natural History edit

The National Museum of Natural History has been called "the Louvre of the Natural Sciences." It is contained in a five buildings laid out along the formal garden; the Gallery of Evolution; the Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology; the Gallery of Botany; the Gallery of Paleontology and Comparative Anatomy; and the Laboratory of Entomology.[14]

The Grand Gallery of Evolution edit

The Grand Gallery of Evolution was designed by Jules André, whose other works in Paris included, in collaboration with Henri Labrouste. the Beaux-arts Bibliotheque National. He became architect of the museum in 1867, and his works are found throughout the Jardin des Plantes. It opened during the Paris Universal Exposition of 1889, though it was not finished as intended; it still lacks a grand facade on the side of rue Geoffroy-Saint-Hilaire. The main facade, facing the two principal alleys of the formal garden, is flanked by two lantern towers. A series of medallions between the bays on the main facade overlooking the garden honors ten of the notable scientists who have worked in the Museum along with an allegorical statue of a woman holding an open book of knowledge.[15]

While the exterior is Beaux-Arts architecture, the interior iron structure was entirely modern, contemporary with the Grand Palais and the new railroad station of the gare d'Orsay (now the Musée d'Orsay). It encloses a rectangular hall 55 meters long, 25 meters wide and 15 meters high, with the glass roof of one thousand square meters supported by rows of slender iron columns. The structure deteriorated, had to be closed in 1965, then underwent extensive restoration between 1991 and 1995. It now presents, through preserved animals and media displays, the evolution of species. It gives special attention to species that has disappeared or are endangered. The collection of preserved animals includes the rhinoceros brought to France in the 18th century by Louis XV.[15]

Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology edit

In front of the Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology stands one of the trees of the royal garden, a Sophora Japonica tree planted by Bernard de Jussieu in 1747. The gallery was constructed between 1833 and 1837 by Charles Rohault de Fleury in neoclassical style, with triangular frontons and pillars. The collection inside includes some six hundred thousand stones, gens, and fossils. Among the notable exhibits is the petrified trunk of bald cypress tree from the tertiary geological era, discovered in Essonne region of France in 1986.[16]

Gallery of Botany edit

In front of the Gallery of Botany is the oldest tree in Paris, a "Robinier Faux Acacia" brought to France from America in 1601. The gallery was built in 1930–35 with a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation. The gallery keeps the Herbier National, specimens of all known plant species, with 7.5 million plants represented. The ground floor gallery is used for temporary exhibitions.[17]

Gallery of Paleontology and Comparative Anatomy edit

This gallery is sited next to the Iris garden, which contains 260 varieties of Iris. The building was constructed between 1894 and 1897 by Ferdinand Dutert, a specialist in metallic architecture, whose most famous building was the Gallery of Machines at the 1889 Paris Exposition. The gallery was expanded in 1961 with a brick addition by architect Henri Delage. The interior is highly decorated with lace-like iron stairways and detail. It displays a large collection of fossilized skeletons of dinosaurs and other large vertebrates.[18]

Gardens edit

Formal Garden edit

The garden covers an area of twenty-four hectares (59.3 acres). It is bordered by the River Seine on the east, on the west by the Rue Geofroy-Saint-Hilaire, on the south by the Rue Buffon, and on the north by Rue Cuvier, all streets named for French scientists whose studies were carried out within the garden and its museums.

The main entrance is on the east, along the Seine, at Place Valhubert, reaching to the Grand Gallery, which copies its width. It is in the style of a French formal garden and extends for five hundred meters (547 yards) between two geometrically-trimmed rows of platane trees. Its rectangula beds contain over a thousand plants. This part of the garden is bordered on the left by a row of galleries, and on the right by the School of Botany, the Alpine Garden, and greenhouses.[19]

The iron grill gateways and fence at Place Valubuert were created in the beginning of the formal garden on the east is a statue of the botanist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, the director the school of botany beginning in 1788. He is best known for devising the first coherent theory of biological evolution.[20]

At the other end of the formal garden, facing the Grand gallery, is a statue of another major figure in the garden's history, the naturalist Buffon, in a dressing gown, seated comfortably in an armchair atop the skin of a lion, holding a bird in his hand. Between the statue and the Gallery is the Esplanade Mine Edwards, beneath which is the Zoothéque, the massive underground storage area for the museum's collections. It is not open to the public.[21]

Greenhouses edit

Four large serres chaudes, or greenhouses, are placed in a row to the right front of the Gallery of Evolution. facing onto the Esplanade Milne-Edwards. They replaced the earliest greenhouses, built on the same site in the early 18th century, to house the plants brought to France from tropical climates by French explorers and naturalists. The Mexican greenhouse, which houses succulents, is separated by an alley from the Australian greenhouse, which hosts plants from that country. They were built between 1834 and 1836 by the architect Rohault de Fleury. Each of the two greenhouses is 20 meters by 12 meters in size. Their iron and glass structure was revolutionary for Paris, preceding by fifteen years the similar pavilions built by Victor Baltard for the Paris markets of Les Halles.[22][23]

A larger structure, the "Jardin d'hiver" (Winter Garden), covering 750 square meters, was designed by René Berger and completed in 1937. It features an Art Deco entrance, between two illuminated glass and iron pillars built for nighttime visits. The heating system keeps the interior temperature at 22 degrees Celsius year-round, creating a suitable environment for bananas, palms, giant bamboo, and other tropical plants. Its central feature, designed to create a more natural environment, is a fifteen-meter-high waterfall.[22]

Alpine Garden edit

The Alpine Garden was created in 1931, and is about three meters higher than the other parts of the garden. It is divided into two zones, connected by a tunnel. It contains several different microclimates, controlled by the water distribution, the orientation toward the sun, the type of soil and the distribution of the rocks. It is home to plants for Corsica, the Caucasus, North America and the Himalayas. The oldest plant is a pistachio tree, planted in about 1700. This tree was the subject of research by the botanist Sebastien Vaillant in the 18th century which confirmed the sexuality of plants. Another ancient tree found there is the metasequoia, or dawn redwood, a primitive conifer.[24]

School of Botany Garden edit

A large section alongside the formal garden, with an entrance on the Allee Bequrerel, belongs to the School of Botany, and is dedicated to plants that have medicinal or economic uses. It was originally created in the 18th century, and now has over three thousand eight hundred specimens, organised by genus and family. Regular tours my museum guides are given of this section. One of its special attractions is the "Pinus nigra" or black pine, of the variety Laricio, from Corsica, which was planted in the garden by Jussieu in the 1770s.[25]

The Small Labyrinth edit

The small garden is placed directly behind the Winter Garden greenhouse. Its prominent features are a large platane tree from the Orient, planted by Buffon in 1785, and a Ginkgo biloba, a tree originating in China considered a living fossil, since traces show that these trees existed in the Second Era of living things, as defined by botanists. It was planted in 1811.

In the center of the garden is monument to the botanist Bernardin de Saint-Pierre. the last director of the garden named by the King before the French Revolution, and the creator of the menagerie. He is better known in France as the author of a well-known romantic movel, "Paul et Virginie", published in 1788.[26]

The Butte Copeaux and the Grand Labyrinth edit

The Grand Labyrinth features a winding path to the top of the Butte Copeaux, a hill overlooking the garden. It was originally created under Louis XIII, then redone in its present form under Louis XVI, on the site of an old garbage dump. At the beginning of the upward path is a Cedar of Lebanon, planted in 1734 by Jussieu, with a trunk four meters in circumference. The butte was largely planted with trees from the Mediterranean, including an old erable tree from Crete planted in 1702 and still in place. including from in it is topped by a picturesque 18th-century cast-iron viewing platform, the oldest work of iron architecture in Paris. The labyrinth was created under Louis XIII, then redone by the garden director Buffon for Louis XVI.

At the top is a neoclassical viewing platform called the Gloriette de Buffon. It was made of cast iron, bronze and copper in 1786-87, using metal from the foundry owned by Buffon. It is considered the oldest metallic structure in Paris.[26] The eight iron columns carry a roof in the shape of a Chinese hat, topped by a lantern with a frieze decorated with swastikas a popular motif in the period. The top is inscribed with a tribute to Louis XVI, honouring his "justice, humanity, and munificence", as well as a quotation from Bouffon, in Latin, translated; "I only count the hours without clouds". It was originally equipped with a precise clock which chimed exactly at noon, but it disappeared in 1795.[26]

Nearby is the Lion Fountain, built in 1834 into the wall of a former reservoir. It is decorated with two bronze lions made in 1863 by the noted animal sculptor Henri Jacquemart.

The Menagerie edit

The Menagerie is the second-oldest public zoo in the world still in operation (following the Tiergarten Schönbrunn in Vienna, Austria), founded in 1752.[27] It was laid out in its current form between 1798 and 1836, and occupies 5.5 hectares (13.6 acres). Besides displaying and studying animals, it has the mission, in cooperation with the zoos of other European cities, to preserve the genetic pool of certain endangered species, with the longer-term goal of trying to re-introduce some of these species into nature.[26]

The menagerie, in the style of 19th century zoos, is composed of a series of fenced areas, separated by paths, each with "Fabriques" or shelters in pictureesque styles, ranging from rustic to Art Deco. The largest building is the rotunda, built of brick and stone between 1804 and 1812, which unites five separate structures. Its form is said to have been inspired by the medal of the Legion of Honor. It was restored in 1988. It formerly contained the large animals of the collection, including the elephants and the famous giraffe given to King Charles X of France, which lived there for twenty-seven years. The trenches around the rotunda were part of the residence of bears. In 1934, most of the large animals were moved to the new zoo in the Bois de Vincennes, and now the building is used mainly for events and receptions.[26]

The major structures in the Menagerie include the neoclassical Grand Volerie, built for flying animals by Louis-Jules André, the designer of the garden's central building, the Gallery of Evolution. It was built in 1888 of iron, stone and wood, in an oval form. Like the main building of the gardens, it features two neoclassical lantern towers. The Palace of Reptiles is also a work of André. It was built between 1870 and 1874. Its decoration includes a bronze statue of "The Snake Charmer" from 1862.

The Vivarium is a gallery by Emmanuel Pontremoli from 1926; it is a modernist update of a Classical Greek villa, with an Art Deco portico dating from 1926. Other notable buildings include the Art Deco Ape House from 1934, a ceramic-covered oval building with the cages on the exterior. In 1934, the apes were transferred to Vincennes.[28]

Collection of fossil plants edit

The garden has a large collection of fossil plants, collected from around the world. Some of them are displayed in the greenhouses of the garden.

Other buildings in the gardens edit

  • The Maison de l'Intendance or Maison de Bouffon, located the entrance to the garden at 36 Rue Geoffroy-Saint-Hilaire, was the residence of the Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, the industrialist, naturalist, and director and chief creator of the gardens from 1739 to his death in 1788. It became part of the garden in 1777–79. (not open to public).[14]
  • The Cuvier House, next to the Gallery of Comparative Anatomy, was the residence of the scientist Georges Cuvier until his death in 1832. Cuvier was one of the founders of Paleontology, and the first to identify the skeleton of a mastodon as a prehistoric animal. Its facade displays his motto in Latin "The "Transibunt et augebitur scientia" ("The Hours Pass and science progresses"). The house was also the place where, in 1896, Henri Becquerel carried out the experiment in 1893 which led to the discovery of uranium. This event is marked by plaque on the facade. (not open to public).[29]
  • The Cuvier Fountain is across the street from the garden at the intersection of Rue Linné and Rue Cuvier, across the street from the very decorative wrought iron gates of the garden. The fountain honors George Cuvier, considered the father of comparative anatomy, with his statue surrounded by a varied collection of animals. It was built by the park architect Vigoureux and the sculptor Jean-Jacques Feuchère in 1840.
  • The Amphitheater near Rue Cuvier in the northwest corner, was constructed in 1787-88 in the garden of the Hôtel de Magny on Rue Cuvier. It was built under the direction of Buffon as a venue for lectures on natural science and the discoveries in the gardens. It was built in a purely neoclassical, or Paladian style. The frontons are decorated with 18th century sculpture depicting the natural sciences. The building was extensively restored in 2002–2003. A large stone vase in front of the amphitheater is a vestige of the Royal Abbey of Saint-Victor, which occupied the site of the amphitheater, and was destroyed during the French Revolution.[29]
  • The Pavilion of New Converts, in the northwest corner of the garden on the Allée Chevreul, is a vestige of the Convent of New Converts, founded in 1622 by Father Hyacinth of Paris and moved to the site in 1656. It was built to shelter Protestant converts to Catholicism. The surviving north facade, with a fronton in the Louis XIV style, contained the refectory, a parlour and bedrooms. After the French Revolution it became part of the gardens. It was the residence and laboratory of a director of the museum for 28 years, the chemist Eugene Chevreul, who died there in 1899 at the age of 103. Chevreul developed the use of color wheels or chromatic circles to resolve the definition of colors. His theory of colors was used at the Gobelins Manufactory of tapestries, where his laboratory was located, and inspired the palette of colors used by Eugène Delacroix. A statue of Chevreul is placed in the Carré Chevreul in the gardens.[29]
  • The hôtel de Magny at 57 Rue Cuvier is the administration building of the gardens. It was built in about 1700 under Louis XIV as a residence, designed by the royal architect Pierre Bullet, whose works included the Porte Saint-Martin and mansions in Le Marais and Place Vendôme After the Revolution, it turned into a boarding school; the celebrated actor Talma was one of the students. The house and estates were purchased, by Buffon 1n 1787 to enlarge the gardens (not open to the public).[30]

Gardens and sites associated with the Jardin des Plantes edit

  • The Paris Zoological Park was created in 1934 in the Bois de Vincennes, as space in menagerie of the Jardin des Plantes became scarce. It is administered, like the Jardin des Plantes, by the Museum of Natural History. New environments were created there for the larger mammals, including the giraffes, elephants, and hippopotamus. The new zoo covers 14.5 hectares (36 acres). The centrepiece is a large artificial rock, 65 meters (213 feet) high. It also includes a large greenhouse with 4000 square meters (43,000 square feet) of plantations, simulating a tropical rain forest.
  • The Parc des Clères in the Normandy specialises in birds and certain quadrupeds, including kangaroos and cervids.
  • The Arboretum de Chèvreloup, located near Versailles was founded in 1927. It covers 222 hectares, and has species raised from seeds collected from botanical gardens around the world. it focuses particularly upon
  • The Jardin botanique exotique de Menton, is located near Menton in the Alpes-Maritimes province. It specialises in tropical plants and those from the Mediterranean climate.
  • The Animal Park of la Haute Touche, between Sologne and Berry, specialises in reproducing endangered species in a large natural setting.
  • The Alpine Garden of Jaysinia at Samoëns in Haut-Savoie specialises in high-altitude plants from around the world, particularly from the Alps.

Access edit

See also edit

Bibliography (in French) edit

  • Deligorges, Stephan; Gady, Alexandre; Labalette, Françoise (2004). Le Jardin des plantes et le Muséum national d'histoire naturalle. Éditions du Patrimoine – Centre des Monuments Nationaux. ISBN 978-2-85822-601-6.

References edit

  1. ^ . Paris Visitors and Convention Bureau. p. 19. Archived from the original on 30 March 2018. Retrieved 24 March 2018.
  2. ^ Base Mérimée: Jardin des plantes et Muséum national d'histoire naturelle, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  3. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 1–4
  4. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 4–5
  5. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 13–15
  6. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 16–18
  7. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 10–11
  8. ^ a b Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 14–15
  9. ^ Herbarium J.P. de Tournefort (1656–1708). brill.com. 1999. ISBN 9789004198388. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  10. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 16–19
  11. ^ The Resistance, Matthew Cobb, p. 269[ISBN missing]
  12. ^ a b Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 38–39
  13. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 22–23
  14. ^ a b Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), p. 38
  15. ^ a b Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 38–42
  16. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 42–43
  17. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 44–45
  18. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 45–47
  19. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 48–49
  20. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), p. 48
  21. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), p. 49
  22. ^ a b Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 50–51
  23. ^ [1] Site of Jardin des Plantes (in French)
  24. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), p. 57
  25. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), p. 52
  26. ^ a b c d e Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), p. 58
  27. ^ [2] Site of the Jardin des Plantes (in English)
  28. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette, "Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle" (2004), pp. 54–56
  29. ^ a b c Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette,(2004), pp. 62–63
  30. ^ Deligeorges, Gady, Labalette,(2004), p. 61

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Paris Botanical Garden (photo gallery)
  • History of the Jardin des Plantes (in English)

jardin, plantes, jardin, redirects, here, park, martinique, savane, french, garden, plants, also, known, paris, french, ʒaʁdɛ, plɑ, paʁi, when, distinguished, from, other, jardins, plantes, other, cities, main, botanical, garden, france, term, official, name, . Jardin du Roi redirects here For the park in Martinique see La Savane The Jardin des plantes French for Garden of the Plants also known as the Jardin des plantes de Paris French ʒaʁdɛ dɛ plɑ t de paʁi when distinguished from other jardins des plantes in other cities is the main botanical garden in France The term Jardin des plantes is the official name in the present day but it is in fact an elliptical form of Jardin royal des plantes medicinales Royal Garden of the Medicinal Plants which is related to the original purpose of the garden back in the 17th century Jardin des plantesJardin des plantesThe exterior of the Grande galerie de l Evolution Gallery of Evolution Drawing plans by architect Louis Jules Andre 1889 when it still was named Galerie de Zoologie Gallery of Zoology Location within ParisEstablished1635 1635 LocationParis FranceCoordinates48 50 38 N 2 21 35 E 48 84396 N 2 35960 E 48 84396 2 35960Typebotanical gardenVisitors1 586 450 1 Public transit accessJussieu AusterlitzMuseum national d histoire naturelle networkMuseum national d histoire naturelle Jardin des Plantes Musee de l Homme Menagerie du Jardin des Plantes Brunoy Ecology Research Centre Chevreloup Arboretum Jardin botanique exotique de Menton Marinarium Concarneau Marine Biology Station Paris Zoological Park Vincennes Zoo Cleres Zoological Park Research and Education Centre on Coastal Systems Haute Touche Zoological Park Jaysinia Alpine Garden Abri Pataud Prehistoric Museum L Harmas de FabreHeadquarters of the Museum national d histoire naturelle National Museum of Natural History the Jardin des plantes is situated in the 5th arrondissement Paris on the left bank of the river Seine and covers 28 hectares 280 000 m2 Since 24 March 1993 2 the entire garden and its contained buildings archives libraries greenhouses menagerie a zoo works of art and specimens collection are classified as a national historical landmark in France labelled monument historique Contents 1 Garden plan 2 History 2 1 The Royal Garden of Medicinal Plants 2 2 The Buffon period 1739 1788 2 3 The French Revolution and the 19th Century The Menagerie 2 4 Late 19th 20th century additions and experiments 3 National Museum of Natural History 3 1 The Grand Gallery of Evolution 3 2 Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology 3 3 Gallery of Botany 3 4 Gallery of Paleontology and Comparative Anatomy 4 Gardens 4 1 Formal Garden 4 2 Greenhouses 4 3 Alpine Garden 4 4 School of Botany Garden 4 5 The Small Labyrinth 4 6 The Butte Copeaux and the Grand Labyrinth 5 The Menagerie 6 Collection of fossil plants 7 Other buildings in the gardens 8 Gardens and sites associated with the Jardin des Plantes 9 Access 10 See also 11 Bibliography in French 12 References 13 External linksGarden plan editThe grounds of the Jardin des plantes include four buildings containing exhibited specimens These buildings are officially considered as museums following the French law they are labelled musee de France and the French Museum of Natural History calls them galeries French for galleries The grande galerie de l Evolution Gallery of Evolution was inaugurated in 1889 as the galerie de Zoologie Gallery of Zoology In 1994 the gallery was renamed with its current name grande galerie de l Evolution and its exhibited specimens were completely reorganised so that the visitor is oriented by the common thread of the evolution as the major subject treated by the gallery The galerie de Mineralogie et de Geologie Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology a mineralogy museum built as of 1833 inaugurated in 1837 The galerie de Paleontologie et d Anatomie comparee Gallery of Paleontology and Comparative Anatomy a comparative anatomy museum in the ground floor and a paleontology museum in the first and second floors The building was inaugurated in 1898 The galerie de Botanique Gallery of Botany inaugurated in 1935 thanks to funds provided by the Rockefeller Foundation contains botany laboratories and the French Museum s National Herbarium the biggest in the world with a collection of almost 8 million samples of plants The building also contains a small permanent exhibition about botany citation needed In addition to the gardens and the galleries there is also a small zoo the menagerie du Jardin des plantes founded in 1795 by Bernardin de Saint Pierre from animals of the menagerie royale de Versailles the menagerie at Versailles which was dismantled during the French Revolution citation needed The Jardin des plantes maintains a botanical school which trains botanists constructs demonstration gardens and exchanges seeds to maintain biotic diversity About 4 500 plants are arranged by family on a one hectare 10 000 m2 plot Three hectares are devoted to horticultural displays of decorative plants An Alpine garden has 3 000 species with world wide representation Specialized buildings such as a large Art Deco winter garden and Mexican and Australian hothouses display regional plants not native to France The Rose Garden created in 1990 has hundreds of species of roses and rose trees citation needed nbsp Jardin des plantes de ParisHistory editThe Royal Garden of Medicinal Plants edit nbsp The garden in 1636The garden was formally founded in 1635 as the Royal Garden of Medicinal Plants by an edict of King Louis XIII The garden was put under the authority of the Physician of the king Guy de la Brosse It was staffed by a group of demonstrateurs who lectured visitors particularly future physicians and pharmacists on botany chemistry and geology illustrated by the garden collections 3 In 1673 under Louis XIV and his new royal physician and director of the Garden Guy Crescent Fagon great nephew of Guy de la Brosse the garden was given a new amphitheater where dissections and other medical courses were conducted The lecturers included the celebrated physician and anatomist Claude Perrault who was equally famous as the architect he designed the facade of the Louvre Palace In the early 18th century the chateau was given an additional floor to house the collections the royal botanist s medicinal plant collection This section was gradually turned into galleries to display the royal collection of minerals At the same time the greenhouses on the west and south were enlarged to hold the plants brought back to France by numerous scientific expeditions around the world New plants were studied dried and cataloged A group of artists made Herbiers books with detailed illustrations of each new plant and the plants of the collection were carefully studied for their possible medical or culinary uses 4 One example was the group of coffee plants brought from Java to Paris which were raised and studied by Antoine de Jussieu for their possible medical and commercial use His studies led to the plantation of coffee in the French colonies of North America 5 The Buffon period 1739 1788 edit nbsp Statue of Georges Louis Leclerc Comte de Buffon in the formal garden nbsp The Sophora Jussieu planted by Buffon in the garden in 1747The most celebrated head of the garden was Georges Louis Leclerc who served as its head from 1739 until his death in 1788 While director of the garden he also owned and operated a large and successful iron works and foundry in Burgundy but lived in the garden in the house that now carries his name Buffon was responsible for doubling the size of the garden expanding down to the banks of Seine He enlarged the Cabinet of Natural History in the main building and added a new gallery to the south He also brought into the scientific community of the garden a team of important botanists and naturalists including Jean Baptiste Lamarck author of one of the earliest theories of Evolution 6 Under the sponsorship of Buffon explorers and botanists were sent to different corners of the world to collect specimens for garden and museum Michel Adanson was sent to Senegal and the navigator La Perouse to the islands of the Pacific They returned with shiploads of specimens which were carefully studied and classified This research caused a conflict between the scientists of Royal Gardens and the professors of the Sorbonne over the question of Evolution The scientists led by Buffon and his followers claimed that natural species gradually evolved while the theologians of the Sorbonne insisted that nature was exactly as it was at the time of the Creation Since the scientists had the backing of the Royal court they were able to continue their studies and publish their work 7 The French Revolution and the 19th Century The Menagerie edit nbsp The Jardin des Plantes and Menagerie in 1842 nbsp Crowd outside the Palace of the Apes c 1900 nbsp Rachel the elephant c 1905 On June 7 1793 in the course of the French Revolution the new government the National Convention ordered a complete transformation of the former royal institutions They created a new Museum of Arts and Techniques transformed the Louvre from a royal residence to a museum of art and joined the Royal Garden of Plants and the Cabinet of Natural Sciences together into a single organization the Museum of Natural History It also received a number of important collections which had belonged to members of the aristocracy such as a famous group of wax models illustrating anatomy which had been created by Andre Pinson 8 The Museum and gardens also benefited from the 1798 expedition launched by First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte to Egypt the military force was accompanied by one hundred and fifty four botanists astronomers archeologists chemists artists and other scholars including Gaspard Monge Joseph Fourier and Claude Louis Berthollet Drawings and paintings of their findings are found in the collections of the Natural History Museum 8 The holdings today include 6 963 specimens of the herbarium collection of Joseph Tournefort donated on his death to the Jardin du Roi 9 The major addition to the garden in the late 18th century was the Menagerie du Jardin des plantes It was proposed in 1792 by Bernardin de Saint Pierre the intendant of the gardens in large part to rescue the animals of the royal menagerie at the Palace of Versailles who had been largely abandoned during the Revolution The Duke of Orleans had a similar private zoo also abandoned At the same time the government of the Convention ordered the seizure of all the animals put on public display by various circuses in Paris In 1795 the government acquired the Hotel de Magne the large estate of a French nobleman next to the gardens and installed the large cages that had housed the animals at Versailles It went through a very difficult early period when the majority of the animals died before it was given sufficient funding and more suitable structures by Napoleon It became the home of animals brought back to France in scientific expeditions in the early 19th century including a famous giraffe given to King Charles X by the Sultan of Cairo in 1827 10 On 25 August 1944 Allied American troops 2nd DB were stationed here for the night after the Liberation of Paris from Nazi Germany 11 Late 19th 20th century additions and experiments edit Throughout the 19th and early 20th century the primary mission of the gardens and museums was research Working in the laboratories there the chemist Eugene Chevreul first isolated fatty acids and cholesterol and studied the chemistry of vegetal dyes The physiologist Claude Bernard studied the functions of the glycogen in the liver In 1896 the physicist Henri Becquerel working in a laboratory in the museum discovered radioactivity He wrapped uranium salts together with an unexposed photographic plate wrapped in black cloth to keep out the sunlight When he unwrapped them the photographic plate had changed color from exposure to the radiation He received the Nobel Prize in 1903 for his discovery 12 The Gallery of Paleontology and of Comparative Anatomy was opened in 1898 replacing structures built between 1795 and 1807 to contain and display the thousands of skeletons the museum had collected The buildings of menagerie were also expanded with the construction of immense Bird House by architect Jules Andre 12 meters high 37 meters long and 25 meters long 13 The appearance of the gardens changed in late 19th and early 20th century with the construction of new buildings In 1877 the gallery of zoology the landmark building that overlooks the formal garden designed by Jules Andre was begun It was built to contain the immense zoological collections of the museum the central hall is a landmark of iron construction comparable to the Grand Palais and the Musee d Orsay It was inaugurated in 1888 but thereafter suffered from a long lack of maintenance It was closed in 1965 In the 1980s a new home was found for the museum s gigantic collections The Zootheque was constructed between 1980 and 1986 underneath the Esplanade Milne Edwards directly in front of the Gallery of Zoology It is accessible only to researchers and contains the thirty million specimens of insects five hundred thousand fish and reptiles one hundred fifty thousand birds and seven thousand other animals The building above underwent a major renovation from 1991 to 1994 to house the updated Grand Gallery of Evolution 12 National Museum of Natural History editMain article National Museum of Natural History France The National Museum of Natural History has been called the Louvre of the Natural Sciences It is contained in a five buildings laid out along the formal garden the Gallery of Evolution the Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology the Gallery of Botany the Gallery of Paleontology and Comparative Anatomy and the Laboratory of Entomology 14 The Grand Gallery of Evolution edit nbsp Courtyard of the Grand Gallery of Evolution nbsp Parade of species in the Grand Gallery of Evolution nbsp Reconstitution of a Dodo bird in section on endangered and disappeared speciesThe Grand Gallery of Evolution was designed by Jules Andre whose other works in Paris included in collaboration with Henri Labrouste the Beaux arts Bibliotheque National He became architect of the museum in 1867 and his works are found throughout the Jardin des Plantes It opened during the Paris Universal Exposition of 1889 though it was not finished as intended it still lacks a grand facade on the side of rue Geoffroy Saint Hilaire The main facade facing the two principal alleys of the formal garden is flanked by two lantern towers A series of medallions between the bays on the main facade overlooking the garden honors ten of the notable scientists who have worked in the Museum along with an allegorical statue of a woman holding an open book of knowledge 15 While the exterior is Beaux Arts architecture the interior iron structure was entirely modern contemporary with the Grand Palais and the new railroad station of the gare d Orsay now the Musee d Orsay It encloses a rectangular hall 55 meters long 25 meters wide and 15 meters high with the glass roof of one thousand square meters supported by rows of slender iron columns The structure deteriorated had to be closed in 1965 then underwent extensive restoration between 1991 and 1995 It now presents through preserved animals and media displays the evolution of species It gives special attention to species that has disappeared or are endangered The collection of preserved animals includes the rhinoceros brought to France in the 18th century by Louis XV 15 Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology edit Main article Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology nbsp Gallery of Mineralogy and GeologyIn front of the Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology stands one of the trees of the royal garden a Sophora Japonica tree planted by Bernard de Jussieu in 1747 The gallery was constructed between 1833 and 1837 by Charles Rohault de Fleury in neoclassical style with triangular frontons and pillars The collection inside includes some six hundred thousand stones gens and fossils Among the notable exhibits is the petrified trunk of bald cypress tree from the tertiary geological era discovered in Essonne region of France in 1986 16 Gallery of Botany edit nbsp Gallery of Botany nbsp Slice of a giant Sequoia tree 2200 years old which fell naturally in 1917 nbsp Specimen of Nepenthes Mirabilis from the Herbier NationalIn front of the Gallery of Botany is the oldest tree in Paris a Robinier Faux Acacia brought to France from America in 1601 The gallery was built in 1930 35 with a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation The gallery keeps the Herbier National specimens of all known plant species with 7 5 million plants represented The ground floor gallery is used for temporary exhibitions 17 Gallery of Paleontology and Comparative Anatomy edit nbsp Gallery of Paleontology and comparative anatomy nbsp A southern mammoth skeleton in the Gallery of Paleontoloogy and Comparative Anatomy nbsp Skeleton of a DiprotodonMain article Gallery of Paleontology and Comparative Anatomy This gallery is sited next to the Iris garden which contains 260 varieties of Iris The building was constructed between 1894 and 1897 by Ferdinand Dutert a specialist in metallic architecture whose most famous building was the Gallery of Machines at the 1889 Paris Exposition The gallery was expanded in 1961 with a brick addition by architect Henri Delage The interior is highly decorated with lace like iron stairways and detail It displays a large collection of fossilized skeletons of dinosaurs and other large vertebrates 18 Gardens editFormal Garden edit nbsp Platane planted by Buffon in 1785 nbsp The formal gardens nbsp Prunus serrulata Kanzan or Japanese cherry treeThe garden covers an area of twenty four hectares 59 3 acres It is bordered by the River Seine on the east on the west by the Rue Geofroy Saint Hilaire on the south by the Rue Buffon and on the north by Rue Cuvier all streets named for French scientists whose studies were carried out within the garden and its museums The main entrance is on the east along the Seine at Place Valhubert reaching to the Grand Gallery which copies its width It is in the style of a French formal garden and extends for five hundred meters 547 yards between two geometrically trimmed rows of platane trees Its rectangula beds contain over a thousand plants This part of the garden is bordered on the left by a row of galleries and on the right by the School of Botany the Alpine Garden and greenhouses 19 The iron grill gateways and fence at Place Valubuert were created in the beginning of the formal garden on the east is a statue of the botanist Jean Baptiste Lamarck the director the school of botany beginning in 1788 He is best known for devising the first coherent theory of biological evolution 20 At the other end of the formal garden facing the Grand gallery is a statue of another major figure in the garden s history the naturalist Buffon in a dressing gown seated comfortably in an armchair atop the skin of a lion holding a bird in his hand Between the statue and the Gallery is the Esplanade Mine Edwards beneath which is the Zootheque the massive underground storage area for the museum s collections It is not open to the public 21 Greenhouses edit nbsp The Serre Mexicaine greenhouse built 1834 36 by Charles Rohault de Fleury an early example of French glass and metal architecture nbsp Art Deco entrance of the Jardin d hiver greenhouse 1937 nbsp Path in interior of the Jardin d hiver greenhouse nbsp Interior of the Jardin d hiver greenhouseFour large serres chaudes or greenhouses are placed in a row to the right front of the Gallery of Evolution facing onto the Esplanade Milne Edwards They replaced the earliest greenhouses built on the same site in the early 18th century to house the plants brought to France from tropical climates by French explorers and naturalists The Mexican greenhouse which houses succulents is separated by an alley from the Australian greenhouse which hosts plants from that country They were built between 1834 and 1836 by the architect Rohault de Fleury Each of the two greenhouses is 20 meters by 12 meters in size Their iron and glass structure was revolutionary for Paris preceding by fifteen years the similar pavilions built by Victor Baltard for the Paris markets of Les Halles 22 23 A larger structure the Jardin d hiver Winter Garden covering 750 square meters was designed by Rene Berger and completed in 1937 It features an Art Deco entrance between two illuminated glass and iron pillars built for nighttime visits The heating system keeps the interior temperature at 22 degrees Celsius year round creating a suitable environment for bananas palms giant bamboo and other tropical plants Its central feature designed to create a more natural environment is a fifteen meter high waterfall 22 Alpine Garden edit nbsp In the Alpine Garden nbsp Ramonda myconi flower from the Pyrenees nbsp Portion of the Alpine GardenThe Alpine Garden was created in 1931 and is about three meters higher than the other parts of the garden It is divided into two zones connected by a tunnel It contains several different microclimates controlled by the water distribution the orientation toward the sun the type of soil and the distribution of the rocks It is home to plants for Corsica the Caucasus North America and the Himalayas The oldest plant is a pistachio tree planted in about 1700 This tree was the subject of research by the botanist Sebastien Vaillant in the 18th century which confirmed the sexuality of plants Another ancient tree found there is the metasequoia or dawn redwood a primitive conifer 24 School of Botany Garden edit nbsp School of Botany garden nbsp The black pine of Laricio planted in the School of Botany garden in 1774 nbsp Garden of the School of BotanyA large section alongside the formal garden with an entrance on the Allee Bequrerel belongs to the School of Botany and is dedicated to plants that have medicinal or economic uses It was originally created in the 18th century and now has over three thousand eight hundred specimens organised by genus and family Regular tours my museum guides are given of this section One of its special attractions is the Pinus nigra or black pine of the variety Laricio from Corsica which was planted in the garden by Jussieu in the 1770s 25 The Small Labyrinth edit nbsp Monument to garden director Bernardin de Saint Pierre and his famous literary characters Paul et Virginie nbsp The Ginkgo biloba in the small labyrinth nbsp Detail of the Ginkgo bilobaThe small garden is placed directly behind the Winter Garden greenhouse Its prominent features are a large platane tree from the Orient planted by Buffon in 1785 and a Ginkgo biloba a tree originating in China considered a living fossil since traces show that these trees existed in the Second Era of living things as defined by botanists It was planted in 1811 In the center of the garden is monument to the botanist Bernardin de Saint Pierre the last director of the garden named by the King before the French Revolution and the creator of the menagerie He is better known in France as the author of a well known romantic movel Paul et Virginie published in 1788 26 The Butte Copeaux and the Grand Labyrinth edit nbsp The Gloriette of Buffon nbsp The view from the Gloriette and its iron columnsThe Grand Labyrinth features a winding path to the top of the Butte Copeaux a hill overlooking the garden It was originally created under Louis XIII then redone in its present form under Louis XVI on the site of an old garbage dump At the beginning of the upward path is a Cedar of Lebanon planted in 1734 by Jussieu with a trunk four meters in circumference The butte was largely planted with trees from the Mediterranean including an old erable tree from Crete planted in 1702 and still in place including from in it is topped by a picturesque 18th century cast iron viewing platform the oldest work of iron architecture in Paris The labyrinth was created under Louis XIII then redone by the garden director Buffon for Louis XVI At the top is a neoclassical viewing platform called the Gloriette de Buffon It was made of cast iron bronze and copper in 1786 87 using metal from the foundry owned by Buffon It is considered the oldest metallic structure in Paris 26 The eight iron columns carry a roof in the shape of a Chinese hat topped by a lantern with a frieze decorated with swastikas a popular motif in the period The top is inscribed with a tribute to Louis XVI honouring his justice humanity and munificence as well as a quotation from Bouffon in Latin translated I only count the hours without clouds It was originally equipped with a precise clock which chimed exactly at noon but it disappeared in 1795 26 Nearby is the Lion Fountain built in 1834 into the wall of a former reservoir It is decorated with two bronze lions made in 1863 by the noted animal sculptor Henri Jacquemart The Menagerie edit nbsp The Rotonda 1804 1812 nbsp The shelter of horses by PrzewalskiSee also Menagerie du Jardin des plantes The Menagerie is the second oldest public zoo in the world still in operation following the Tiergarten Schonbrunn in Vienna Austria founded in 1752 27 It was laid out in its current form between 1798 and 1836 and occupies 5 5 hectares 13 6 acres Besides displaying and studying animals it has the mission in cooperation with the zoos of other European cities to preserve the genetic pool of certain endangered species with the longer term goal of trying to re introduce some of these species into nature 26 The menagerie in the style of 19th century zoos is composed of a series of fenced areas separated by paths each with Fabriques or shelters in pictureesque styles ranging from rustic to Art Deco The largest building is the rotunda built of brick and stone between 1804 and 1812 which unites five separate structures Its form is said to have been inspired by the medal of the Legion of Honor It was restored in 1988 It formerly contained the large animals of the collection including the elephants and the famous giraffe given to King Charles X of France which lived there for twenty seven years The trenches around the rotunda were part of the residence of bears In 1934 most of the large animals were moved to the new zoo in the Bois de Vincennes and now the building is used mainly for events and receptions 26 nbsp A mongoose in the Jardin des Plantes nbsp Flamingos in the Jardin des Plantes nbsp Vicunas in the Jardin des PlantesThe major structures in the Menagerie include the neoclassical Grand Volerie built for flying animals by Louis Jules Andre the designer of the garden s central building the Gallery of Evolution It was built in 1888 of iron stone and wood in an oval form Like the main building of the gardens it features two neoclassical lantern towers The Palace of Reptiles is also a work of Andre It was built between 1870 and 1874 Its decoration includes a bronze statue of The Snake Charmer from 1862 The Vivarium is a gallery by Emmanuel Pontremoli from 1926 it is a modernist update of a Classical Greek villa with an Art Deco portico dating from 1926 Other notable buildings include the Art Deco Ape House from 1934 a ceramic covered oval building with the cages on the exterior In 1934 the apes were transferred to Vincennes 28 Collection of fossil plants edit nbsp Ginkgo digitata found in Yorkshire 170 million years old nbsp Fossil leaves of Cordaites lungatus nbsp Imprints of the extinct fern Pecopteris from Commentry France 300 million years old nbsp Fossil leaves of Zamites feneonisThe garden has a large collection of fossil plants collected from around the world Some of them are displayed in the greenhouses of the garden Other buildings in the gardens edit nbsp The Maison Buffon residence of Georges Louis Leclerc Comte de Buffon nbsp The Cuvier Fountain nbsp The Amphitheater 18th c nbsp The Hotel de Magny the garden administration buildingThe Maison de l Intendance or Maison de Bouffon located the entrance to the garden at 36 Rue Geoffroy Saint Hilaire was the residence of the Georges Louis Leclerc Comte de Buffon the industrialist naturalist and director and chief creator of the gardens from 1739 to his death in 1788 It became part of the garden in 1777 79 not open to public 14 The Cuvier House next to the Gallery of Comparative Anatomy was the residence of the scientist Georges Cuvier until his death in 1832 Cuvier was one of the founders of Paleontology and the first to identify the skeleton of a mastodon as a prehistoric animal Its facade displays his motto in Latin The Transibunt et augebitur scientia The Hours Pass and science progresses The house was also the place where in 1896 Henri Becquerel carried out the experiment in 1893 which led to the discovery of uranium This event is marked by plaque on the facade not open to public 29 The Cuvier Fountain is across the street from the garden at the intersection of Rue Linne and Rue Cuvier across the street from the very decorative wrought iron gates of the garden The fountain honors George Cuvier considered the father of comparative anatomy with his statue surrounded by a varied collection of animals It was built by the park architect Vigoureux and the sculptor Jean Jacques Feuchere in 1840 The Amphitheater near Rue Cuvier in the northwest corner was constructed in 1787 88 in the garden of the Hotel de Magny on Rue Cuvier It was built under the direction of Buffon as a venue for lectures on natural science and the discoveries in the gardens It was built in a purely neoclassical or Paladian style The frontons are decorated with 18th century sculpture depicting the natural sciences The building was extensively restored in 2002 2003 A large stone vase in front of the amphitheater is a vestige of the Royal Abbey of Saint Victor which occupied the site of the amphitheater and was destroyed during the French Revolution 29 The Pavilion of New Converts in the northwest corner of the garden on the Allee Chevreul is a vestige of the Convent of New Converts founded in 1622 by Father Hyacinth of Paris and moved to the site in 1656 It was built to shelter Protestant converts to Catholicism The surviving north facade with a fronton in the Louis XIV style contained the refectory a parlour and bedrooms After the French Revolution it became part of the gardens It was the residence and laboratory of a director of the museum for 28 years the chemist Eugene Chevreul who died there in 1899 at the age of 103 Chevreul developed the use of color wheels or chromatic circles to resolve the definition of colors His theory of colors was used at the Gobelins Manufactory of tapestries where his laboratory was located and inspired the palette of colors used by Eugene Delacroix A statue of Chevreul is placed in the Carre Chevreul in the gardens 29 The hotel de Magny at 57 Rue Cuvier is the administration building of the gardens It was built in about 1700 under Louis XIV as a residence designed by the royal architect Pierre Bullet whose works included the Porte Saint Martin and mansions in Le Marais and Place Vendome After the Revolution it turned into a boarding school the celebrated actor Talma was one of the students The house and estates were purchased by Buffon 1n 1787 to enlarge the gardens not open to the public 30 Gardens and sites associated with the Jardin des Plantes edit nbsp Artificial mountain in the Paris Zoological Park nbsp Chamaecyparis lawsoniana tree in the Arboretum de Chevreloup nbsp View of the Jardin botanique exotique de Menton nbsp Alpine Garden of Jaysinia in Haut SavoieThe Paris Zoological Park was created in 1934 in the Bois de Vincennes as space in menagerie of the Jardin des Plantes became scarce It is administered like the Jardin des Plantes by the Museum of Natural History New environments were created there for the larger mammals including the giraffes elephants and hippopotamus The new zoo covers 14 5 hectares 36 acres The centrepiece is a large artificial rock 65 meters 213 feet high It also includes a large greenhouse with 4000 square meters 43 000 square feet of plantations simulating a tropical rain forest The Parc des Cleres in the Normandy specialises in birds and certain quadrupeds including kangaroos and cervids The Arboretum de Chevreloup located near Versailles was founded in 1927 It covers 222 hectares and has species raised from seeds collected from botanical gardens around the world it focuses particularly upon The Jardin botanique exotique de Menton is located near Menton in the Alpes Maritimes province It specialises in tropical plants and those from the Mediterranean climate The Animal Park of la Haute Touche between Sologne and Berry specialises in reproducing endangered species in a large natural setting The Alpine Garden of Jaysinia at Samoens in Haut Savoie specialises in high altitude plants from around the world particularly from the Alps Access edit Located near the Metro stations Quai de la Rapee Jussieu Place Monge and Gare d Austerlitz See also editList of botanical gardens in France Friends of the Natural History Museum ParisBibliography in French editDeligorges Stephan Gady Alexandre Labalette Francoise 2004 Le Jardin des plantes et le Museum national d histoire naturalle Editions du Patrimoine Centre des Monuments Nationaux ISBN 978 2 85822 601 6 References edit Tourism in Paris Key Figures 2016 Paris Visitors and Convention Bureau p 19 Archived from the original on 30 March 2018 Retrieved 24 March 2018 Base Merimee Jardin des plantes et Museum national d histoire naturelle Ministere francais de la Culture in French Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 1 4 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 4 5 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 13 15 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 16 18 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 10 11 a b Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 14 15 Herbarium J P de Tournefort 1656 1708 brill com 1999 ISBN 9789004198388 Retrieved 29 September 2014 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 16 19 The Resistance Matthew Cobb p 269 ISBN missing a b Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 38 39 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 22 23 a b Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 p 38 a b Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 38 42 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 42 43 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 44 45 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 45 47 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 48 49 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 p 48 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 p 49 a b Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 50 51 1 Site of Jardin des Plantes in French Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 p 57 Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 p 52 a b c d e Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 p 58 2 Site of the Jardin des Plantes in English Deligeorges Gady Labalette Le Jardin des Plantes et le Museum National d Histoire Naturelle 2004 pp 54 56 a b c Deligeorges Gady Labalette 2004 pp 62 63 Deligeorges Gady Labalette 2004 p 61External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jardin des plantes de Paris Official website Paris Botanical Garden photo gallery History of the Jardin des Plantes in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jardin des plantes amp oldid 1184400231, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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