Thomas Hanbury was so determined to only plant what would readily thrive, preserve local flora and lure back birds that anyone would think he was gardening today. However, it was in 1867 that this forward-thinking Englishman acquired a rocky hillside on Italy’s Mediterranean coast and set about leaving no space unused.
Today, 157 years after Thomas Hanbury began planting his coastal wonderland, Carolyn Hanbury, representing the fourth generation with ties to the place, lives in a secondary villa in the Hanbury Botanical Gardens. It’s interesting what it does for a garden to remain in the orbit of the same family for so long. Despite differences in taste across generations, the garden reflects a steadiness of vision that properties sold more frequently rarely share.More plants are left to grow old. They can reach for the sky, carpet the ground and wrap over walls. In some spots, they might even self-seed with abandon.
Adding to the garden’s mystique is a 2000 novel written by William’s brother Giles, based on the lives of William and Giles’ grandparents at Clos du Peyronnet, in which the garden plays a prominent role.
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