The Mulberry-Garden is a comedy by Restoration poet and playwright Sir Charles Sedley (1639–1701) and was published in 1668 In his diary, Samuel Pepys...
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Morus (plant) (redirect from Mulberries)
genus of flowering plants in the family Moraceae, consists of 19 species of deciduous trees commonly known as mulberries, growing wild and under cultivation...
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Morus alba (redirect from White mulberry)
Morus alba, known as white mulberry, common mulberry and silkworm mulberry, is a fast-growing, small to medium-sized mulberry tree which grows to 10–20 m...
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Buckingham Palace (redirect from The Queens Private Apartments)
garden, then known as Goring Great Garden. He did not, however, obtain the freehold interest in the mulberry garden. Unbeknown to Goring, in 1640 the...
68 KB (7,416 words) - 19:37, 8 October 2024
The Mulberry garden, originally Morušová zahrada in Czech, is a cottage garden in the Czech Republic, situated in the Czech Central Uplands in the village...
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Look up mulberry in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Mulberry is the common name of several trees in the genus Morus. See the list of plants known as...
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Morus nigra (redirect from Black mulberry)
called black mulberry (not to be confused with the blackberries that are various species of Rubus), is a species of flowering plant in the family Moraceae...
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Sir Charles Sedley, 5th Baronet (category Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica with Wikisource reference)
Villiers, Duchess of Cleveland, the mistress of Charles II. While The Mulberry-Garden exuberantly praises the achievements of the Restoration, Bellamira displays...
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garden dates from 1609 when James I purchased four acres of land "near to his palace of Westminster for the planting of mulberry trees". The garden covers...
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76, pp. 87–88. For the special case of Bellamira, see Sir Charles Sedley's "The Mulberry-Garden (1668) and "Bellamira: or, The Mistress" (1687), ed...
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