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The medieval monastic gardens of Øm Abbey, Denmark

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Abstract

The monastic gardens is often identified as a symbol of monastic medical knowledge. However, gardens around monasteries are more than that. Medieval monasteries functioned as self-sufficient units and had a wide variety of gardens close by. In the monastic garden crops were grown for consumption, for making beverages, to use as insecticide, spices, textiles and rope as well as medicine and from the gardens came flowers to decorate the church during the liturgical calendar.
None monastic gardens from the Middle Ages have survived in northern Europe. It is necessary to gain information’s elsewhere from and with the help of archaeology, historical sources, plant macrofossils and pollen analysis’s it is possible to identify types of gardens and the landscape surrounding the monasteries.
This paper demonstrates how it is possible, through an interdisciplinary approach to get information’s of the gardens and surrounding landscape of the medieval Cistercian Abbey Øm in Denmark, AD 1172-1560.
Original languageDanish
Publication date2022
Number of pages1
Publication statusPublished - 2022
Event28th EAA Annual Meeting - Ungarn, Budapest, Hungary
Duration: 31 Aug 20223 Sept 2022
Conference number: 28th
https://www.e-a-a.org/eaa2022

Conference

Conference28th EAA Annual Meeting
Number28th
LocationUngarn
Country/TerritoryHungary
CityBudapest
Period31/08/202203/09/2022
Internet address

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