ITotD: Tulipomania / The quest for the perfect tulip |
Tulipomania / The quest for the perfect tulip Posted: 19 Jan 2015 12:00 AM PST by Morgen JahnkeIn his 1850 novel The Black Tulip, French author Alexandre Dumas (père) describes a competition, initiated by the Dutch city of Haarlem in the 1670s, in which 100,000 florins (150 florins being the average yearly income at the time) would be given to the first person who could grow a black tulip. Although Dumas’s story is fictional, it is based on a very real phenomenon that took place in the Netherlands in the early 17th century. Between 1634 and 1637, the Netherlands (then called the United Provinces) saw the rise and fall of many fortunes due to an intense period of tulip trading. Now described as tulipomania, it involved the wild overvaluation of certain types of tulip, leading to the eventual crash of the inflated market. It might seem strange that tulips inspired such an economic frenzy; what was it that made them so desirable? While there are solid reasons why tulips became such a hot commodity, tulipomania was ultimately driven by speculators looking to make a quick profit. In that way, it can be seen as a precursor to more modern forms of market inflation and decline, such as the dotcom bubble and historical fluctuations of the stock market. In Rare Form Another reason for their popularity was their relative rarity. While tulips can be grown simply from seed, there is no guarantee that the resulting flowers will resemble their parent plants at all. The only way to obtain a particularly prized bloom is to grow one from an offset, which Pollan describes as “the little, genetically identical bulblets” found at the base of a tulip bulb. The process of cultivating offsets was a lengthy one, adding to the scarcity of tulips. In addition, the most valued tulips of the time were ones said to be “broken,” that is those tulips with bright flame or feather-like patterns on their petals. The most famous of this type of tulip was the Semper Augustus, a white flower marked by brilliant red strokes. These tulips produced fewer offsets, making them even rarer; although it was not known at the time, the “broken” effect was caused by a virus that weakened the plant. Gone to Seed As the taste for certain types of tulip became more focused, prices for the most valued bulbs rose dramatically among the upper classes. At first limited to collectors and the wealthy, the large amounts of money to be made soon inspired people of otherwise limited means to sell everything they had to cash in on the trade. At the market’s highest point, single bulbs sold for thousands of florins, the most famous being a Semper Augustus bulb that sold for 6,000 florins (or 40 times the average yearly income). As more people entered the trade, eventually the sale of real bulbs gave way to windhandel, or wind trade, meaning the future production of bulbs was bought and sold. This increasingly risky venture couldn’t last. The tulip bubble burst in February 1637 when oversupply caused prices to drop precipitously. Very quickly, the fortunes of those unable to sell the bulbs they had purchased at the height of the market went disastrously downhill, and many were left in financial ruin. Dutch Treat Permalink • Email this Article • Categories: History, Science & Nature More Information about Tulipomania...Check out the historical romance The Black Tulip, by Alexandre Dumas (père) at Amazon.com. Michael Pollan’s book The Botany of Desire provides fascinating details about the history of tulip cultivation. Tulipomania: The Story of the World’s Most Coveted Flower & the Extraordinary Passions It Aroused, written by Mike Dash, is a valuable source of information about the tulipomania phenomenon. Learn more about tulips at the holland.nl Web site. Related Articles from Interesting Thing of the Day
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