Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Tourist Attractions in Nancy

Tourist Attractions in Nancy

Nancy is a famous historical and cultural city in France. Its historical district (mainly including Place Stanislas and Place Carriere) was included in the World Cultural Heritage List in 1983 on June 19, 1758. , Nancy’s first botanical garden broke ground under Bakar’s leadership, located on rue Sainte-Catherine. In 1768, plants from the botanical garden of the city of Pont Asson settled here. Bakar carefully managed the botanical garden. During his 15 years as director, he spared no effort to bring all the valuable plants he could collect into the botanical garden to thrive. In 1805, Queen Joséfina de Poharnais visited the Botanical Garden and sent a gift of exotic flowers and plants from her greenhouse. At that time, the botanical garden classified plants for the first time based on Linnaeus' plant classification system. In 1854, the Botanical Garden became famous when the famous botanist Dominique Alexander Goldhorn joined the team. He redrawn the blueprint of the Botanic Garden and began to build a tropical greenhouse. In 1976, the three botanical gardens in Nancy, the Historical Garden of Sainte-Catherine Avenue, the Streitland Garden and the Montmoiselle Botanical Garden, formed the Nancy Botanical Protection Institute and the Federation of Botanical Gardens. In 1996, the Académie Angesir-Carrie participated in the management of the federation, which today is the most dynamic organization in the French gardening community. The Federation is renowned for its rich plant species, extensive collections, precious heritage, unique human resources, and the close collaboration and unremitting efforts of its partner groups. The federation has a special plant library, which contains 7,000 books, more than 200 professional journals and plant atlases with more than 8,000 pictures. The herbarium has 80,000 specimens. In addition to flower specimens from Lorraine and France, there are also many specimens from Algeria, Australia, Brazil, Mauritius, the Netherlands, Syria, and the United States. There are also many rare lichen and bryophyte specimens discovered by French botanists. The federation's seed bank has been in operation since 1988 and has a full set of special equipment required for a series of experiments such as seed germination and storage. The seed bank collects 45,000 seed samples, and annual seed guides are sent to 1,200 units in 110 countries for seed exchange. The federation's two gardens, the Moss Botanical Garden and the Streitberg Garden, allow visitors to get close to and learn about plants through numerous themed collections. The Mongolian Botanical Garden was founded in 1976 and is located on the outskirts of Mongolian City. There are 12,000 different plants on 27 hectares of land, including common plants known to locals and exotic species originating from distant countries. . The alpine plant area of ??the park includes fifteen open-field plant collection areas, including the Arboretum, Rose Garden, Medicinal Botanical Garden, Historical Plant Collection Area, Classification Garden, Harvest Garden, Horticultural Garden, and Lorraine Botanical Garden, showing people a wealth of plant species. There are 6,500 horticultural varieties planted in the 2,500-square-meter tropical greenhouse, including araceae, orchids, succulents, carnivorous plants, bromeliads and ant-loving plants, just like stars in various roles, posing and charming. Thousands of kinds. The Streitland Garden was founded in 1966 on the roadside on the central ridge of the Vosges Mountains. It is the garden with the richest alpine plant species in France. 500 species of plants native to major mountain ranges around the world have settled here, including alpine plants native to the Alps, Jura Mountains, and Pyrenees, shrubs and trees from the Balkan Peninsula and Caucasus Mountains, and trees from distant lands. Rare plants of the Himalayas. The park also has a collection area for alpine flowers from the Vosges Mountains, which is a safe haven for alpine plants from the Vosges Mountains. The park's natural alpine forests, peat bogs and alpine pastures, exotic plants, winding mountain roads and many unexpected wonders delight visitors and arouse people's imagination.