The History of the Flower Language
Attributing flowers with hidden meanings and using them to
express feelings and sending messages is an ancient tradition
and even the old Greeks used flowers in this manner.
Cleopatra used to shower her lover
Marcus Antonius in rose petals to express her love for him.
During the 17th century B.C. the Turks developed a large flower
language that soon spread and gained popularity all over
Europe. During the strict Victorian era, conveying messages in
the form of flowers experienced a new boom and secret lovers
sent seemingly innocent flower bouquets to each other.
The Elizabethan period is usually considered as the height
of the Victorian era and one of the harshest periods from a
moral point of view. This naturally formed a rich breeding
ground for hypocrisy and ways to get around the austere
official codes of behavior especially for the upper and middle
classes. It was also a period when the romantic love was highly
sought for and the flower language contains both these
components; romantic gestures and the idea of true love
conquering any obstacles and strict rules.
During the Victorian era several different flower
dictionaries were published that helped to spread the knowledge
of the secret flower language. It was common to fabricate
poetical explanations to the shapes and colors of flowers. One
popular myth claimed that the red rose came into existence when
a white rose blushed in the Garden of Eden when Adam and Eve's
ate the apple. Virtually any type of message could be
transformed into a beautiful flower bouquet since a whole
sentence could be conveyed in a single flower.
Since several different flowers could have almost the same
meaning, it was usually not hard to construct a good looking
bouquet with matching flowers for each message. The flower
language even had a type of basic grammar since messages could
be altered depending on how the flowers where arranged and
combined. A red rose combined with white rose buds would for
instance mean a different thing than a single red blooming
rose. Scents, sizes and even the position of the giver when
bouquets were delivered directly would affect the message.
The receiver could also take the opportunity to send secret
messages to the giver. Accepting a flower or floral bouquet
with the right hand was generally perceived as a Yes while the
left hand indicated No. A flower held upside down when
presented would literary turn the message upside down and the
message should be interpreted as the total opposite of the
normal meaning of the flower. Giving a lady or gentlemen a red
rose that had been turned upside down was a very strong sing of
rejection.
Flowers has always been used to decorate rooms and to mark
important occasions, but during the Victorian era the natural
world became highly fashionable since it was linked to the new
romanticisms, a reaction to the scientific ideals of the 16th
century. Floral arrangements was frequently enfolded in satin
and received as wrapped gifts. Every room should ideally be
decorated with flowers and the Victorian women devoted their
time to the construction of highly sophisticated and very
beautiful floral arrangements.
The flower language was not only used in bouquets sent to
lovers; the flower language would affect everything from
centerpieces to wedding bouquets. Understanding the floral
language became and imperative part of Victorian life.
Visit our site to read more about the flower language and
about the meaning of flowers. You can also visit our
site that is special devoted to the flower language for
roses and the meaning of roses.
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