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Peace Garden
Iznik tiles are flowering
Thanks to the Turkish community in Québec
and the Iznik Foundation, the Montréal Botanical Garden is graced with a
number of magnificent Iznik tiles bearing floral designs. They decorate
nine low walls and nine pillars of the Peace Garden. Every spring, the
indisputable floral stars of the show in this intimate garden will be
tulips, a species that originated in Turkey.

A technique from over 1000
years ago
Iznik tiles are produced in Iznik, a city in Turkey. The unique technique
and the complex process used to make them were lost in the 17th
century and not rediscovered until 300 years later, in 1995, thanks to
tireless research by the Iznik Foundation. Ancient Iznik tiles can still
be seen on Classical-style buildings from the 15th, 16th
and 17th centuries, and in the collections of some of the
world's finest museums.
Spotlight on tulips
Garden tulips are native to Turkey. In the mid-16th century,
Ogier de Busbecq, ambassador to Ferdinand I, sent tulip seeds and bulbs
from Constantinople (now Istanbul) to the Austrian Court in Vienna. It
took less than a century for tulips to spread throughout Europe. Their
popularity produced an unprecedented frenzy in the plant world-the famous
"Tulipomania". Millions of tulip bulbs are produced each year, especially
in the Netherlands, to adorn public and private gardens and for cut
flowers.
The Peace Garden is located next to the
restaurant terrace, across from the administration building.
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