Results 1 to 5 of 5

Thread: Before the Garden Gnome, the Ornamental Hermit: A Real Person Paid to Dress like a Druid

  1. #1
    Fantasy Peddler
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"

    Kazimiera's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2012
    Last Online
    @
    Ethnicity
    Caucasian
    Country
    South Africa
    mtDNA
    I1b
    Gender
    Posts
    26,216
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 35,722
    Given: 17,037

    2 Not allowed!

    Default Before the Garden Gnome, the Ornamental Hermit: A Real Person Paid to Dress like a Druid

    Before the Garden Gnome, the Ornamental Hermit: A Real Person Paid to Dress like a Druid

    Source: http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles...its-in-gardens


    An English hermitage illustrated in "Merlin: a poem" (1735) (via British Library)

    While some gardeners might now throw in a gnome statue among their flowers and shrubberies, back in the 18th century wealthy estate owners were hiring real people to dress as druids, grow their hair long, and not wash for years. These hired hermits would lodge in shacks, caves, and other hermitages constructed in a rustic manner in rambling gardens. It was a practice mostly found in England, although it made it up to Scotland and over to Ireland as well.

    Gordon Campbell, a Professor of Renaissance Studies at the University of Leicester, recently published The Hermit in the Garden: From Imperial Rome to Ornamental Gnome with Oxford University Press. It's the first book to delve into the history of the ornamental hermit in Georgian England. As Campbell explains in this video for the book:

    "Recruiting a hermit wasn't always easy. Sometimes they were agricultural workers, and they were dressed in a costume, often in a druid's costume. There was no agreement on how druids dressed, but in some cases they wore what we would call a dunce's cap. It's a most peculiar phenomenon, and understanding it is one of the reasons why I have written this book."

    How the live-in hermit came to be a fashionable touch to a splendid garden goes back to the Roman emperor Hadrian with his villa at Tivoli, which included a small lake with a structure in it built for one person to retreat. When the ruins of this early hermitage were unearthed in the 16th century, it was suggested that Pope Pius IV build one for himself, which he did at the Casina Pio IV. Yet from here it gradually verged away from religious devotees isolating themselves for spiritual reflection to hermitting being an 18th century profession for those willing to put up with the stipulations.

    As Campbell cites from an advertisement referenced in Sir William Gell's A Tour in the Lakes Made in 1797, "the hermit is never to leave the place, or hold conversation with anyone for seven years during which he is neither to wash himself or cleanse himself in any way whatever, but is to let his hair and nails both on hands and feet, grow as long as nature will permit them."


    John Bigg, the Dinton Hermit. Not a garden hermit, but of same era (via Wellcome Library)


    John Bigg, the Dinton Hermit (via Wellcome Library)

    Others asked that their hermits not wear shoes or even to entertain party guests with personalized poetry or the serving of wine. It might seem like a whimsical garden feature, but in fact it was all about that most celebrated of Georgian England emotions: melancholy. Introspection and a somberness of spirit were prized among the elite, and the roles they asked their hermits to play embodied this. A 1784 guide to the Hawkstone estate in Shropshire belonging to Sir Richard Hill describes its resident hermit:

    "You pull a bell, and gain admittance. The hermit is generally in a sitting posture, with a table before him, on which is a skull, the emblem of mortality, an hour-glass, a book and a pair of spectacles. The venerable bare-footed Father, whose name is Francis (if awake) always rises up at the approach of strangers. He seems about 90 years of age, yet has all his sense to admiration. He is tolerably conversant, and far from being unpolite."

    At other hours, the Hawkstone hermit was replaced with a mannequin, or perhaps, Campbell speculates, an automaton. Some estate owners who couldn't afford, or did not want, a real live hermit sometimes set up the hermitage as if its resident had just left. Others used the hermitages themselves.

    The ornamental hermit vanished at the end of the 18th century. In The Hermit in the Garden, Campbell chronicles the remains in a "catalogue of hermitages," listing whether they are destroyed, extant, or never built at all. However, the humble hermit may not have left us entirely. As Campbell argues, "the garden hermit evolved from the antiquarian druid and eventually declined into the garden gnome."


    An 18th century hermitage that survives in Manor Gardens Eastbourne, East Essex (photograph by Kevin Gordon)

  2. #2
    Elder of Zyklon Prisoner Of Ice's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Last Online
    05-27-2015 @ 05:53 PM
    Location
    Subhuman City
    Ethnicity
    Neanderthal
    Country
    United States
    Taxonomy
    Trondelag
    Religion
    Blond Jesus
    Gender
    Posts
    18,329
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 19,981
    Given: 24,682

    1 Not allowed!

    Default

    I like to lurk in people's gardens but I never get paid.
    Out Of Africa Theory is a lie.
    http://www.theapricity.com/forum/sho...88#post3431588
    And a mighty angel took up a stone like a great millstone, and cast it into the sea, saying, Thus with violence shall that great city Babylon be thrown down, and shall be found no more at all.

  3. #3
    Fantasy Peddler
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"

    Kazimiera's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2012
    Last Online
    @
    Ethnicity
    Caucasian
    Country
    South Africa
    mtDNA
    I1b
    Gender
    Posts
    26,216
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 35,722
    Given: 17,037

    1 Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Prisoner Of Ice View Post
    I like to lurk in people's gardens but I never get paid.
    I think your motivation for lurking in gardens is somewhat different to that of the hermits.

  4. #4
    Elder of Zyklon Prisoner Of Ice's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Last Online
    05-27-2015 @ 05:53 PM
    Location
    Subhuman City
    Ethnicity
    Neanderthal
    Country
    United States
    Taxonomy
    Trondelag
    Religion
    Blond Jesus
    Gender
    Posts
    18,329
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 19,981
    Given: 24,682

    1 Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Kazimiera View Post
    I think your motivation for lurking in gardens is somewhat different to that of the hermits.
    Don't be so sure, they had to pass the time somehow.
    Out Of Africa Theory is a lie.
    http://www.theapricity.com/forum/sho...88#post3431588
    And a mighty angel took up a stone like a great millstone, and cast it into the sea, saying, Thus with violence shall that great city Babylon be thrown down, and shall be found no more at all.

  5. #5
    thumbs up if u agree oh-nahhh's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2013
    Last Online
    11-24-2021 @ 04:45 PM
    Location
    The Tower
    Ethnicity
    The Magician
    Country
    Faroes
    Y-DNA
    I1
    Taxonomy
    Knight of Wands
    Religion
    Branch CoVidian
    Gender
    Posts
    5,537
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 3,957
    Given: 2,507

    0 Not allowed!

    Default

    Hermits have no peer pressure.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. The curious case of the hungry hermit
    By Prisoner Of Ice in forum Off-topic
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 08-25-2014, 09:00 AM
  2. Replies: 0
    Last Post: 09-19-2013, 05:02 PM
  3. Hitler-salute garden gnome lands artist in trouble
    By The Lawspeaker in forum Deutschland - English Entries
    Replies: 13
    Last Post: 07-19-2009, 02:14 PM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •