History of Controlled Environment Horticulture: Ancient Origins
2022; American Society for Horticultural Science; Volume: 57; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.21273/hortsci16169-21
ISSN2327-9834
Autores Tópico(s)Plant Physiology and Cultivation Studies
ResumoIn the first century CE, two Roman agricultural writers, Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella and Gaius Plinius Secundus (Pliny the Elder), referred to proto-greenhouses ( specularia ) constructed for the Emperor Tiberius (42 BCE–37 CE) presumably adjacent to his palace, the Villa Jovis on the Isle of Capri. Pliny stated in Historia Naturalis (Book 19, 23:64) that the specularia consisted of beds mounted on wheels that were moved into the sun, and on wintry days withdrawn under the cover of frames glazed with transparent stone ( lapis specularis ) to provide fruits of cucumis . According to Pliny, this was “ a delicacy for which the Emperor Tiberius, had a remarkable partiality; in fact there was never a day on which he was not supplied it .” The cucumis fruits described by Columella and Pliny, long mistranslated as cucumbers, Cucumis sativus , were in fact long-fruited melons, Cucumis melo subsp. melo Flexuosus Group. They are known today as vegetable melons, snake melons, and faqqous , and were highly esteemed in Rome and ancient Israel.
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