Further reading
REFERENCE BOOKS & ARTICLES USED IN FLOWEROLOGY:
A modern herbal - Maude Grieve (1931) - Stone Basin Books
Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology - C.T. Onions (1966) Clarendon Press
Flora Brittanica - Richard Mabey (1997) - Sinclair Stevenson / Chattos&Windus
Elsevier's Dictionary of plant names and their origin - D. C. Watts (2000) Elsevier Science
Oxford Dictionary of Word Origins - Julia Cresswell (2010) - Oxford University Press
Folklore and Symbolism of Flowers, Plants and Trees - Ernst and Johanna Lehner (2003) - Dover Publications
The Book of Secrets of Albertus Magnus (1550 / 2004) - Weiser Books
Le Petit Albert (English Edition) - Albertus Parvus Lucius (18th century - 2016) - Tarl Warwick
Etymologisch woordenboek - J. De Vries and F. de Tollenaere (1992) - Het Spectrum
Naturalis Historia - Pliny the Elder (AD 77 / 2004) Penguin Classics
Culpepper's Colour Herbal - Nicholas Culpepper (1649 / 1997) Foulsham & Co / BCA
A Gardener's Handbook of Plant names - A.W. Smith
The Herb Book - John Lust (2009) Dover Publications / Benedict Lust Publications
Some plant names of the Ute Indians - Ralph V. Chamberlain (1912) - Essay
The Practice of Medicine in Ancient Rome - William A. Scott (1955) - Article - Canadian Anaesthetists’ Society Journal
Ancient Herbs in the J. Paul Getty Museum Gardens - Jeanne D’Andrea (1982) - J. Paul Getty Museum
Compendium of Symbolic and ritual plants in Europe - Marcel de Clene and Marie Claire de Jeune - Mens en Cultuur Ghent - 2003
Oxford Dictionary of Plant Lore - Roy Vickery (1995) - Oxford University Press
Folk Magic and Healing - Fez Inkwright (2019) - Liminal 11
Britain’s Wild Flowers - A treasury of Traditions, Superstitions, Remedies and Literature - Rosamond Richardson (2017) - Pavilion Books for The National Trust
Archeology and Language – The puzzle of Indo-European Origins - Colin Renfrew (1987) - Pimlico (Random House)
Gerard's Herbal, or The Generall Historie of Plantes - John Gerard (1597)
On the Popular Names of British Plants, being an explanation of our indigenous and most commonly cultivated species - R.C.A. Prior, M.D. - Williams and Norgate (1879)