
The monastery garden is a symbolic place where medicinal plants have both therapeutic use and religious meaning. The cloister is a natural as well as a spiritual space, where the monastic virtues are expressed by the geometry of the alleys and the floral composition. By the end of the Middle Ages, a couple of abbeys designed enclosed gardens (hortus conclusus) to symbolize the Garden of Mary, often represented in 14th and 15th centuries paintings.
Europe, Plants, Medicinal, History, Early Modern 1451-1600, Religion and Medicine, Botany, History, Medieval, Mysticism
Europe, Plants, Medicinal, History, Early Modern 1451-1600, Religion and Medicine, Botany, History, Medieval, Mysticism
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