อ้างอิง ของ เรือนส้ม

  1. Gervase Markham, in The Whole Art of Husbandry (London 1631) also recommends protecting other delicate fruiting trees— "Orange, Lemon, Pomegranate, Cynamon, Olive, Almond"— in "some low vaulted gallerie adjoining upon the Garden".
  2. Billie S. Britz, "Environmental Provisions for Plants in Seventeenth-Century Northern Europe" The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 33.2 (May 1974:133-144) p 133.
  3. Britz 1974:134f
  4. Its columned exterior relates it to the architecture of the house, a feature of orangeries though not of their modern descendents, greenhouses.
  5. Graham Stewart-Thomas, "Orangeries in the National Trust," Quarterly Newslette of the Garden History Society, 1967:25.
  6. http://www.orangeryuk.co.uk
  7. Such precaution against a sheltering south-facing wall was arranged by the architect Salomon de Caus at Heidelberg about 1619, with removable shutters on an unobtrusive permanent frame, according to Britz 1974:134,
  8. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew: The Orangery
  9. The list was given in Stewart-Thomas, loc. cit..
  10. Note by T. E. C. W. in the Quarterly Newsletter of the Garden History Society .
  11. Ann Milkovich McKee (2007). Images of America — Hampton National Historic Site. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-4418-2.