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  2. Chinese garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_garden

    The Chinese garden is a landscape garden style which has evolved over three thousand years. It includes both the vast gardens of the Chinese emperors and members of the imperial family, built for pleasure and to impress, and the more intimate gardens created by scholars, poets, former government officials, soldiers and merchants, made for reflection and escape from the outside world.

  3. Classical Gardens of Suzhou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_Gardens_of_Suzhou

    According to UNESCO, the gardens of Suzhou "represent the development of Chinese landscape garden design over more than two thousand years," [3] and they are the "most refined form" of garden art. [3] These landscape gardens flourished in the mid-Ming to early-Qing dynasties, resulting in as much as 200 private gardens. [1]

  4. Lingnan garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingnan_garden

    Lingnan garden (Cantonese Jyutping: Ling 5 naam 4 jyun 4 lam 4; Traditional Chinese: 嶺南園林), also called Cantonese garden, is a style of garden design native to Lingnan – the traditionally Cantonese provinces of Guangdong and Guangxi in southern China.

  5. List of Chinese gardens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Chinese_gardens

    This picture of the Yuyuan Garden in Shanghai (created in 1559) shows all the elements of a classical Chinese garden – water, architecture, vegetation, and rocks. This is a list of Chinese-style gardens both within China and elsewhere in the world.

  6. The Craft of Gardens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Craft_of_Gardens

    The work is primarily focused on architectural features, rather than natural features. Contrasts have been drawn between this and other classic works of East Asian garden design, such as Sakuteiki (of the Japanese Heian period) which concentrates on water and rocks, and numerous Japanese works of the Edo period (Tsukiyama teizoden, Sagaryuniwa kohohiden no koto, Tsukiyama sansuiden), to ...

  7. Borrowed scenery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borrowed_scenery

    Borrowed scenery (借景; Japanese: shakkei; Chinese: jièjǐng [1]) is the principle of "incorporating background landscape into the composition of a garden" found in traditional East Asian garden design. The term borrowing of scenery ("shakkei") is Chinese in origin, and appears in the 17th century garden treatise Yuanye. [2]

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