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Early
Scottish Gardens
Early
Scottish Gardens: A Writer's Odyssey
What did early Scottish gardens look like? How did these gardens
relate to the house and how did passing time affect their development?
Where did the plant stock come from: herbs, shrubs, annuals
and perennials, from the thistle to the rose? Did the gardens
match the richly embellished interiors of Scots aristocrats
and merchants, particularly after the Reformation? Evocative
and tantalizing remains of "missing gardens" such
as earthworks, stone walls, doocots, date stones, terracing,
traceries of paths, sundials, a few ancient yews, and gardens
themselves, Culross, Edzell, Pitmedden, Kinross, fire the imagination
as Sheila Mackay guides the reader on a personal tour of the
16th, 17th and 18th century gardens of Scotland. Contrary to
popular belief within British garden history, designed landscapes
have played a vital role in the lives of aspiring Scots from
the 16th century, with paintings from the time depicting elaborate
gardens to match houses and interiors that reflected status,
wealth and a sense of self-esteem. In her exploration of these
gardens, from Arthur's Seat in 1500 to The Hermitage in 1750,
Sheila Mackay reveals the dramatic developments that occurred
during this period. This is a history peopled with the characters
of the time, and includes extracts from songs, poems, and paintings
of gardens throughout the period. Imaginative reconstructions
of gardens for the people of the time, a 16th century garden
for the calligrapher Esther Inglis and a 17th century landscape
for the portrait painter George Jamesone, and the creative re-design
of the ground of the Pleasaunce at Edzell Castle in light of
contemporary European developments enhance the sense of the
inspired designs of the time.
Early Scottish Gardens.
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