@article{oai:kuins.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001107, author = {橘, セツ}, issue = {24}, journal = {研究紀要, The bulletin of Kansai University of International Studies}, month = {Mar}, note = {This paper is concerned with life history/life geography of the Countess of Warwick, Frances Evelyn Greville (1861-1938), also known as ‘Daisy’. Lady Warwick’s life was a paradox: her luxuriant aristocratic lifestyle was increasingly at odds with her conversion to socialism from around 1905, and the left-wing political activity that she undertook for the rest of her life. This paper looks at three different landscapes with which Lady Warwick was closely associated: Easton Lodge, Warwick Castle and Studley Castle. This paper then focuses on Lady Warwick’s philosophy and practice in relation to women’s agricultural and horticultural education. She opened the Lady Warwick Hostel in Reading in 1898, before developing Lady Warwick’s College at Studley Castle in 1903. The college offered a high standard of horticultural practical training and education for women. Finally, this paper introduces the Japanese student, Taki Handa, who studied at Lady Warwick College from 1906 to 1908. The paper evaluates how Lady Warwick’s horticultural school contributed to the establishment of a new female branch of the horticulture profession concerned with ‘the lighter branches of agriculture’}, pages = {85--100}, title = {英国貴族ウォリック伯爵夫人フランセーズ・イヴリン・グレヴィルの社会思想と女子農業・園芸学校の創立}, year = {2023} }