Kate Teltscher
@kateteltscher.bsky.social
5.1K followers 1.1K following 52 posts
Cultural historian and writer. Author of Palace of Palms, a Times and New Statesman Book of the Year. https://kateteltscher.com/
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Reposted by Kate Teltscher
treeseeker.bsky.social
Huge thanks to the team at @plantperspectives.bsky.social @whitehorsepress.bsky.social and @sarahwhpress.bsky.social for creating such stunning designs for our special #arborealhumanities issue!
Check out all the beautifully crafted papers, poetry and reviews at whp-journals.co.uk/PP/issue/vie...
Reposted by Kate Teltscher
planthums-uk.bsky.social
It's here!!! 200 pages of #research articles, #narrative #nonfiction, #poetry & #reviews - all on #trees! Many thanks to @whitehorsepress.bsky.social, @treeseeker.bsky.social & all our contributors url.uk.m.mimecastprotect.com/s/9ZIoCojPZH...
kateteltscher.bsky.social
‘One of the most superbly beautiful of trees ... worth crossing the globe to see’.
For more on thawka-gyi or 'Pride of Burma', see the latest issue of Plant Perspectives. Open access:
www.whp-journals.co.uk/PP/article/v...
kateteltscher.bsky.social
What is the most beautiful flowering tree in the world? Find out in my essay for Plant Perspectives, ed. by the wonderful Caroline Cornish and Christina Hourigan.
Also features a brilliant essay on ackee by Heather Craddock,
@planthums-uk.bsky.social @treeseeker.bsky.social @hcraddock.bsky.social
Front and back cover of Plant Perspectives vol 2.2 with image of installation 'Of the Oak' by Marshmallow Laser Feast in Kew Gardens 2025 on the cover. Amherstia nobilis, hand-coloured lithograph by Maxim Gauci, based on drawing by Vishnuprasad from Nathaniel Wallich, Plantae Asiaticae Rariores 1 (1830).
kateteltscher.bsky.social
This is sad news indeed.
Peter was extremely generous and encouraging to me when I was starting out on my career. He was very open to interdisciplinary research when that was quite unusual.
ihr.bsky.social
The IHR is saddened by the death of Peter (P.J.) Marshall, historian of the British Empire, and a long-standing member of King's College London's History department. As a long-time friend, supporter, and Fellow of the IHR, he will be greatly missed and remembered for his kindness and courtesy.
kateteltscher.bsky.social
Yes, green glass was often recommended for ferns and orchids.
kateteltscher.bsky.social
19th-century glass houses at Kew were traditionally glazed green. What was unusual about the Palm House was the series of experiments to determine the precise shade!
Reposted by Kate Teltscher
kateteltscher.bsky.social
You're right, Sathnam!
The glass was originally pale green – a shade determined by the chemist Robert Hunt through a bizarre series of experiments involving the extracted juices of palm leaves!
Chemist Robert Hunt by William Buckler (1842) Pictured with camera and prism. Diagram from Robert Hunt's record of experiments with green glass for the Palm House.
Reposted by Kate Teltscher
drbeard79.bsky.social
Still thinking about when me & @victorianmasc.bsky.social came up with Romantic poetry inspired sweets yesterday:
Me: Oooh I want a Grecian urn jelly
Maybe this could be MY side hustle
Daffodil ice lollies
Mont Blanc choc ice
Tyger Tyger chocolate bar involving chili maybe
Lonely Cloud Marshmallow
Prometheus gingerbread man
Laura: and marzipan eagle
I LOVE IT
Wordsworth and Co. Fine
Confectionery Co.
Me: Aww yeah
kateteltscher.bsky.social
You're right, Sathnam!
The glass was originally pale green – a shade determined by the chemist Robert Hunt through a bizarre series of experiments involving the extracted juices of palm leaves!
Chemist Robert Hunt by William Buckler (1842) Pictured with camera and prism. Diagram from Robert Hunt's record of experiments with green glass for the Palm House.
Reposted by Kate Teltscher
historyworkshop.org.uk
How was smell weaponised in settler colonial processes of scoping and transforming landscapes inhabited by indigenous people?

Meg Parsons and Karen Fisher on the use of the eucalyptus tree by Pākehā settlers on Māori swamp-land: www.historyworkshop....

The Swamp and the Gum Tree
Meg Parsons and Karen Fisher on how Pākehā settlers weaponised smell in the colonisation of Māori swamp-land.
www.historyworkshop.org.uk
kateteltscher.bsky.social
Really enjoyed working on this great project! The Kew Record Book is now freely available online. It's a unique document in the history of botany and horticulture, recording incoming and out going plants at Kew Gardens 1793-1809.
blog.biodiversitylibrary.org/2023/05/trav...
kateteltscher.bsky.social
Well, this is interesting.
The UK-Kenya exhibition at the 2025 Venice Biennale reimagines the Palm House at Kew Gardens as a timber structure. The decorative panels are made of sustainable materials.
'Vena Cava' by Mae-ling Lokko and Gustavo Crembil
venicebiennale.britishcouncil.org/geology-brit...
© GBR – Geology Of Britannic Repair, Vena Cava. Image by Chris Lane.
kateteltscher.bsky.social
Just writing a paper about this pair, Thomas Dawodu and Ferdinand Leigh, the first Africans to train at Kew Gardens.
Come hear their remarkable story at Gardens & Empires conference, British Library, June 27-8, & online: events.bl.uk/events/garde...
@sathnam.bsky.social @eicathomefinn.bsky.social
Formal photographic studio portrait of Thomas Dawodu, 1893 Formal photographic studio portrait of Ferdinand Leigh, 1893
Reposted by Kate Teltscher
britishlibrary.bsky.social
Unearthed: The Power of Gardening is now open! 🌱

Discover botanical treasures, medieval manuscripts, contemporary artworks and the stories of the remarkable people and plants that shape our gardens today.

Book now: bit.ly/BLUnearthed
Members go free
A visitor looks at a display case containing a large scroll featuring various botanical drawings of leaves. Two framed prints of flowers are displayed on the wall behind them. 
Two visitors look at a display of open books, featuring large bright botanical drawings of plants and flowers.
A visitor looks at an open book showing a large botanical drawing of a sunflower.
kateteltscher.bsky.social
Very excited about two Kew Gardens exhibitions on empire & botanical art this October:
– Flora Indica: recovering lost histories of Indian botanical art, curated by Henry Noltie & Sita Reddy.
– New work by The Singh Twins: Botanical Tales & Seeds of Empire.
www.kew.org/about-us/pre...
Intricat panel from painting by The Singh Twins with imperial emblems, butterflies and botanical images.
Reposted by Kate Teltscher
yalebooks.bsky.social
Built in 1576 in a field in Shoreditch, the Theatre was London's first purpose-built playhouse and #Shakespeare's first theatre.

This timeline, from Daniel Swift’s book The Dream Factory charts the Theatre’s history:
yalebooks.co.uk/shakespeares...

#ShakespeareDay #shakespearebirthday #TheatreSky
Shakespeare's First Theatre: A Timeline - Yale University Press London
In 1576, in a muddy field in Shoreditch, James Burbage erected London’s first purpose-built commercial playhouse. A place of high culture and quick
yalebooks.co.uk
Reposted by Kate Teltscher
irishrainforest.bsky.social
Undersea rewilding initiative to restore a kelp forest in West Sussex is celebrating amazing results for marine biodiversity.

Rewilding is needed just as much at sea as on land.
www.bbc.com/news/article...
Kelp forest project in West Sussex having 'remarkable results'
The rewilding project off the West Sussex coast is celebrating its fourth anniversary.
www.bbc.com
Reposted by Kate Teltscher
Reposted by Kate Teltscher
eicathomefinn.bsky.social
'The case of the Madagascar periwinkle (Catharanthus roseus) not only demonstrates the value of knowledge held by Indigenous and local communities, but also illustrates how this expertise has often been exploited.'
How researchers can work fairly with Indigenous and local knowledge
Scientists around the world are recognizing that their research method isn’t the only way.
www.nature.com