Sunday, March 22, 2015

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National Horticultural Society of France (SNHF) is a recognized association of public utility since 1855 and general interest since 2012. The creation of the library is concomitant with the founding of the company in 1827.
To date, the library of the SNHF is one of the first horticultural holdings. Its collections botanica include more than 10,000 monographs, a collection of nearly 1,300 periodical titles, of nursery catalogs - more than 400 companies represented - and a rich Pictures. Its catalog is available online from the website of the SNHF.
With the twin goals of conservation and development, the library began digitization programs in 2011. The program began with the digitization of periodicals. This is representative of the French horticultural journals movement, but also representative of the identity of the Company. Thereafter, it is the nursery catalogs that have been scanned.
Since 2012, the SNHF is pleased to be associated center of the BNF and was able through this partnership digitize old monographs dealing botanica with botany, horticulture but also the history and the art of gardening.
The year 2013 was devoted to the establishment of a new access to the digital collections, its opening was held in early 2014. The digital library Hortalia (see results in Gallica) revolves around five collections: letters and autographs, magazines, old monographs, catalogs botanica and images.
New treaty on the size of fruit trees, containing botanica several figures that mark the ways to prune well, to make them produce much fruit are currently accessible journals of French horticulture digitized in 2011: the Journal botanica of the SNHF (1827- botanica 1870), horticultural Review (1830-1900), the Seine Bulletin (1843-1854), universal botanica Horticulturist (1839-1846) and the French horticulturist (1851-1872); 80 old monographs of the sixteenth century to the eighteenth century, the theory and practice of gardening Dezallier d'Argenville, The Theatre of agriculture and husbandry fields of Olivier botanica de Serres, the Tulip Treaty and the Treaty of Rome John Paul buttercups Ardene and over 500 engravings mostly from horticultural Review (1845-1867).
The digital library Hortalia was performed using the Omeka platform developed by the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, and George Mason University and licensed under GPL license. It is compatible with Zotero, bibliographic botanica data management software developed botanica by the University. The digital library is accessible on mobile devices, smartphones and tablets.
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