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  2. Medieval garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_garden

    The quantity and level of detail shown in gardening-related miniatures, especially from Flanders, increased sharply from about 1475 until the tradition finally expired around the 1530s. This is beyond the usual definition of the Middle Ages, [12] but new Renaissance ideas and plants had barely reached the northern centres of illumination by ...

  3. Monastic garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monastic_garden

    The early Middle Ages brings a surprisingly clear snapshot of gardening at the time of Charlemagne with the survival of three important documents: the Capitulare de villis, Walafrid Strabo's poem Hortulus, and the plan of St Gall which depicts three garden areas and lists what was grown. Further evidence can be found in dilapidated ruins of old ...

  4. History of landscape architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_landscape...

    A first comprehensive history of landscape architecture, as distinct from the history of gardening was written by Norman T Newton with the title Design on the land: the development of landscape architecture (Belknap/Harvard 1971). The book has 42 chapters. The first three chapters are on Ancient Times, The Middle Ages, and The World of Islam.

  5. History of gardening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_gardening

    During the Middle Ages, gardens were thought to unite the earthly with the divine. The enclosed garden as an allegory for paradise or a "lost Eden" was termed the hortus conclusus. Freighted with religious and spiritual significance, enclosed gardens were often depicted in the visual arts, picturing the Virgin Mary, a fountain, a unicorn, and ...

  6. Medieval architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_architecture

    Although from the 15th century the Gothic style was replaced by Renaissance architecture, marking the end of the Middle Ages and medieval architecture, there were Gothic Revival and Romanesque Revival movements in the nineteenth century. [4] Both religious and secular examples of medieval Gothic architecture survive, notably a number of cathedrals.

  7. Naumburg Cathedral and the High Medieval Cultural Landscape ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naumburg_Cathedral_and_the...

    [note 1] "The 'Naumburg Cathedral and the surrounding cultural landscape along the rivers Saale and Unstrut' are outstanding and representative examples of the High Middle Ages (1000–1300). Nowhere else in the world has such a high density of monuments and cultural landscape elements from the High Middle Ages been preserved in such a small ...

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  9. Medieval art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_art

    Art in the Middle Ages is a broad subject and art historians traditionally divide it in several large-scale phases, styles or periods. The period of the Middle Ages neither begins nor ends neatly at any particular date, nor at the same time in all regions, and the same is true for the major phases of art within the period. [10]