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John Hooper Harvey (1911–1997)

Author of The Plantagenets

29+ Works 565 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Works by John Hooper Harvey

The Plantagenets (1948) 187 copies, 4 reviews
English Cathedrals (1961) 41 copies
Mediaeval Gardens (1981) 35 copies
Dublin (1972) 20 copies
Mediaeval craftsmen (1975) 17 copies
The Perpendicular Style (1978) 17 copies
The Mediaeval Architect (1972) 10 copies
Conservation of buildings (1972) 9 copies

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Harvey, John Hooper
Other names
Harvey, John H.
Birthdate
1911-05-25
Date of death
1997-11-17
Gender
male
Occupations
architect
fascist
Organizations
Imperial Fascist League
Nordic League
Nationality
UK
Associated Place (for map)
UK

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
This book was written in 1947. I did not consider this to be significant when I found it lounging upon a second hand book stall with a preposterously minute price tag. After all, by the 16th century, the Plantagenets were history so, 1947 is positively up to date.

Wrong! 1947 was, of course, just after the conclusion of the Second World War and we Brits were making rather a bad fist of coming to terms with the fact that Britannia did not sit astride the world in a position of complete show more dominance. John Harvey is quite open about his position, even in the preface, he is proud to explain that stupid foreigners have sacrificed their royalty but, Great Britain has had the intelligence to retain the system of rule by God's chosen representative. This view that the King is not as other men and completely incapable of error, pervades the entire work.

To begin with, this seemed quite a wacky wheeze but, the more I read, the more it set me thinking. Mr Harvey's version of history was not only praised by reviewers, but seen as suitable for educational purposes. Disgraceful, it wouldn't happen now......but, how can we be sure that in fifty years time, our views will not be considered as archaic as John Harvey's is now? The depressing thing is, that we cannot and, surely this calls into question the entire reason for reading history.
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Not so much a how-to book; more a guide to some of the principles and ethics behind garden restoration. It does give useful descriptions of restored gardens in the UK (and mentions some major restorations from the USA). Perhaps the most practical aspect are the appendices - lists of plants that were commonly available in the UK at the different periods covered by the work.
didn't say many important things but the reading was interesting and easy to understand .

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Statistics

Works
29
Also by
3
Members
565
Popularity
#44,254
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
5
ISBNs
42
Languages
1

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