A Coronary Garden was more popular in late Victorian times but as I discovered it goes back beyond the 17th century. Coronary gardens were used to grow flowers that could be used for wreaths and garlands and take their name Coronary from the word crown not the health problem.
The modern day equivalent is probably the florist shop or stall located at Crematoria
This photograph is not a true Coronary garden but a memorial garden in front of the cenotaph at Otley.
Note about Stock Gillyflower. – I originally took it to mean Carnation or Pinks of the Dianthus family but other plant dictionaries include stocks like Matthiola incana, or say stock gillyflower is the Cheiranthus; the queen’s gillyflower is the Hesperis or even any of several Old World plants cultivated for their brightly colored flowers.
Wordswarmnet Dictionary for Stock Gilly Flower
The tips and flower selection have been taken from ‘ Directions for The Gardiner at Says- Court in 1686’. They were published in a wider more embracing form in ‘Directions for the Gardiner and Other Horticultural Advice’ by John Evelyn the diarist and OUP available via Amazon
The original manuscript was first transcribed in 1932 by Sir Geoffrey Keynes
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