Location and climate
The Hohenheim Gardens are located in the south of Stuttgart in the district of Plieningen on the edge of the Filder plain in the centralGarden sections
Today, the Hohenheim Gardens cover around 30 hectares of parkland. Large parts of the ensemble are used by the University of Hohenheim for teaching and research purposes. South of Hohenheim Palace lies the Hohenheim Schlossberg with a vineyard and a former sheep pasture.State Arboretum - Exotic Garden
The oldest part of the Hohenheim Gardens is the Exotic Garden, which lies to the southwest of the palace. Between 1776 and 1793 it was designed as an English garden under Duke Carl Eugen von Württemberg and his favourite and later wife Franziska von Hohenheim. Duke Carl Eugen, through his court architect Reinhard F. Heinrich Fischer, contributed around 60 scenes with monuments and buildings to this garden concept, ruins of antiquity next to Baroque representative buildings and buildings from village surroundings. The gardens were also known as Franziskas Dörfle.State Arboretum - Landscape Garden
Located to the south of the Exotic Garden, Hohenheim's most recent garden section, the Landscape Garden was established in 1998. Here, on a hill, there is an open monopteros, surrounded by eight columnar hornbeams, which serves as a vantage point. Ornamental fruit trees such as apples, pears, cherries and hawthorns have been planted as leading shrubs. A large wildflower meadow in the central area connects the woody plantings.Hohenheim Palace Park
Directly in front of the residential palace, built in 1785, lies the semicircular Hohenheim Palace Park with its old stock of trees and shrubs. Following the example of Versailles, Duke Carl Eugen had a late Baroque representative garden laid out, whose path system still exists today. In 1829, a botanical garden with open spaces and groups of trees was created in the Palace Park for agricultural and forestry training. Later, viewpoints and monuments were added. From about 1901, a kind of plant system was located here, with plants sorted according to functional groups. In 1974, the beds of the Old Botanical Garden were relocated south of the Schlossberg, but the woody planting remained. On the south side of Hohenheim Palace, the heritage-listed Jägerallee is situated between the vineyard and the sheep pasture. From 1772 onwards this avenue was planted with Italian columnar poplars, grown by the ducal court gardener Johann Caspar Schiller, Friedrich Schiller's father. These were replaced in the mid-19th century by the Canadian poplars which line the path today.Vegetation history and medicinal plant gardens
Plant System
A plant system, sorted according to functional botanical groups, was used by Hohenheim botany professor Oskar von Kirchner around 1901 in the Hohenheim Palace Park. In 1974 it was moved to its present location south of the Hohenheim Collection Greenhouse. The plant system contains around 3000 species from 230 families. It was planted according to developmental aspects based on the systematics of the US botanistCollection Greenhouse
In 1789, the first heated greenhouse in Hohenheim, the so-called Iron House, was built as part of the English Garden, where Duke Carl Eugen kept a pineapple collection with over 1000 different plants. In 1896, newer greenhouses were built under Oskar von Kirchner, and the cold and warm house collection has continued ever since. In 2014, the current Collection Greenhouse was opened. One of the largest begonia collections in Germany is kept here. In addition, there are sections with tropical plants of East Africa, an area with orchids and aquatic plants, an area with insectivorous plants, a cactus house, a section for tropical useful plants and one for African desert plants.Special woody plants
Duke Carl Eugen and especially Franziska von Hohenheim began collecting woody plants when the garden was established in 1776. In 1785, the garden theorist Cay Lorenz von Hirschfeld described the Exotic Garden as "the richest and most complete collection of foreign trees and shrubs that we possess in Germany",. based on the woody plant directory of 1780. From 1813 onwards, the main focus was on an arboretum with botanical-scientific orientation, and the nursery became the Royal Exotic State Nursery. In the process, the concepts from the time of Franziska von Hohenheim were revived and the main emphasis was once again on collecting. This tradition continued and in 1953 the garden was elevated to the status of "Landesarboretum Baden-Württemberg". This was later extended by the landscape garden. Today it contains around 2500 different woody plants. Major focal points of the collection are Acer, Betula, Magnolia, Quercus and leguminous species. In addition, there is a large assortment of old woody plant varieties and forms. All woody plants can be found in the woody plant database and are georeferenced. The Exotic Garden in Hohenheim still contains several trees from the ducal period, planted between 1779 and 1793, including several American tulip trees, a maple-leaved plane tree and two summer lime trees. Other woody plants date from the time of the Royal Württemberg exotic tree nursery between 1799 and 1840. There are over 180 entries for the Hohenheim gardens in the list of Champion Trees from the German Dendrological Society, 60 of which are record-breaking trees in Germany, and 120 record-breaking trees in Baden-Württemberg.Monuments and works of art
Listed in each case are the name of the artist, the year of dedication and the name of the work of art/monument. * English Garden 1777: The Roman Inn * English Garden 1778: The Three Pillars of Thundering Jupiter * English Garden 1788: The ‘Spielhaus’ * Kurt Fanghänel 1901: Bismarck Monument * Günter Ott 1979: Memorial of the Ackerbau students * Markus Wolf (sculptor) 1998: Franziska Monument * Edgar Haldenwang 1998: Vision * Hans Dieter Schaal 2001: Monopteros * Renate Hoffleit 2004: Mittagsstele * Markus Wolf (sculptor) 2008: Katharina Monument * Uli Gsell 2013: Paracelsus Memorial Stone A monument for Franziska von Hohenheim, the second wife of Duke Carl Eugen, was erected in 1998 on her 250th birthday. This monument, designed by the Plieningen sculptor Markus Wolf in the form of an obelisk, stands at the crossroads between Das Wirtshaus zur Stadt RomCitations
Literature
* Gottlob Heinrich Rapp: Description of the garden in Hohenheim. In: Pocket Calendar for the Year ... for nature and garden lovers. With illustrations of Hohenheim and other engravings. Tübingen 1795-1799, reprint 1991-1998 - 1795: pp. 53-79, 1796: pp. 49-77, 1797: pp. 57-87, 1798: pp. 97-124, 1799: pp. 57-85 - Illustrations online: 1795, 1796, 1797, 1798, 1799. * Adolf Martin Steiner, Ulrich Fellmeth, Matthias Frisch: Hohenheim Gardens. History and Art. Hohenheim 2008. * Robert Gliniars, Adolf Martin Steiner: The Hohenheim Gardens - A Paradise in the South of Stuttgart. 96 pages, 70 colour photos, Verlag Eugen Ulmer, 2018. * Robert Gliniars, Adolf Martin Steiner: The Hohenheim Gardens. In: University of Hohenheim 1818-2018. ed. H. Hagemann and G. Kollmer-von Oheim-Loup; Festschrift zum 200jährigen Jubiläum. Pp. 354-383, 16 illustrations. Eugen Ulmer Publishers, 2018. * Robert Gliniars: Hohenheim Gardens - Palace Park, State Arboretum and Botanical Garden. Gartenpraxis (Ulmer-Verlag), 01, 76-78, 2016. * Günter Koch, Rainer Bäßler: Landesarboretum Baden-Württemberg - Gehölzkatalog. 208 pages, University of Hohenheim, 2008. * Adolf Martin Steiner, Ulrich Fellmeth: Denkmale und Gedenksteine in den Hohenheimer Gärten und Grünanlagen. Der Goldene Pflug (DLM Hohenheim) 31, 41-46, 2010. * Adolf Martin Steiner, Ulrich Fellmeth, Matthias Frisch: Hohenheim Gardens - History and Art. (Archive of the University of Hohenheim), 2008. * Adolf Martin Steiner, Ulrich Fellmeth, Robert Gliniars: Hohenheim - Der Schlosspark - Geschichte, Denkmäler, Gehölze. (Archive of the University of Hohenheim), 2014.Weblinks
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