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  2. Randoll Coate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randoll_Coate

    Beazer Garden Maze in Bath Mosaic at the centre of the Beazer Garden Maze. In 1979, Coate was introduced to Adrian Fisher, another enthusiastic maze designer.Shortly afterwards Coate and Fisher formed the maze design company Minotaur Designs and designed 15 mazes together between 1979 and 1989, (some with the landscape architect Graham Burgess in 1983 and 1984).

  3. Adrian Fisher (maze designer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adrian_Fisher_(maze_designer)

    Adrian Fisher MBE is a British pioneer, inventor, designer and creator of mazes, puzzles, public art, tessellations, tilings, patterns and networks of many kinds.He is responsible for more than 700 mazes in 42 countries since 1979.

  4. Maze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maze

    A maze is a path or collection of paths, typically from an entrance to a goal. The word is used to refer both to branching tour puzzles through which the solver must find a route, and to simpler non-branching ("unicursal") patterns that lead unambiguously through a convoluted layout to a goal.

  5. Aw, shucks: An inside look at the great American corn-maze ...

    www.aol.com/aw-shucks-inside-look-great...

    Iowa-based MazePlay designs Richardson's maze, using sterile corn, which doesn't fertilize, so it's plowed under at the end of the season and replanted from seeds at the start of a new one.

  6. Celtic maze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_maze

    Celtic mazes are straight-line spiral key patterns that have been drawn all over the world since prehistoric times. The patterns originate in early Celtic developments in stone and metal-work, and later in medieval Insular art. Prehistoric spiral designs date back to Gavrinis (c. 3500 BCE). [1]

  7. Labyrinth of Versailles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labyrinth_of_Versailles

    The layout of the maze was unusual, as there was no central goal, and, despite the five-metre-high (16 ft) hedges, allowed glimpses ahead. [6] Jean-Aymar Piganiol de La Force in his Nouvelle description du château et parc de Versailles et de Marly (1702) describes the labyrinth as a "network of allées bordered with palisades where it is easy to get lost."

  8. Corn maze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corn_maze

    A corn maze in Germany A view from inside a corn maze near Christchurch, New Zealand. A corn maze or maize maze is a maze cut out of a corn field. Corn mazes have become popular agritourism attractions in North America, and are a way for farms to generate tourist income. Corn mazes appear in many different designs.

  9. Turf maze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turf_maze

    Breamore, Hampshire: "Miz-Maze" or "Mizmaze" Dalby, North Yorkshire: "City of Troy" at grid reference, described as the smallest turf maze in Europe. Hilton, Cambridgeshire (cut in 1660) Saffron Walden, Essex (design with four "bastions"; recut in 1699; path is a narrow groove, marked with bricks in 1911) Troy Farm, Somerton, Oxfordshire: "Troy"