EGO |
People
,
Places
,
Pages
Edit Page
Title
Url
https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800
Content
<!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en" class="en text article"> <head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> <meta http-equiv="Access-Control-Allow-Origin" content="*"> <meta http-equiv="Content-Security-Policy" content="upgrade-insecure-requests"> <link rel="shortcut icon" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/img/favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon"> <link rel="icon" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/img/favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/img/apple-touch-icon.png"> <!-- Always force latest IE rendering engine (even in intranet) & Chrome Frame Remove this if you use the .htaccess --> <link rel="schema.DC" href="https://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"> <link rel="schema.DCTERMS" href="https://purl.org/dc/terms/"> <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge,chrome=1"> <meta http-equiv="content-language" content="de"> <meta name="description" content="The history of landscape design in the 18th century offers numerous examples of transfer processes. This article investigates the emergence of the landscape garden around 1700 from a new concept of naturalness borrowed from classical antiquity. The change of paradigm from architecture to painting was an essential change of genre for the landscape garden. From about 1770 to 1800, an international discussion of the theory of gardens developed at a high level. The Anglo-Chinese garden contains all of the prerequisites for an encyclopaedic transfer of knowledge. Finally, the article deals with the kinaesthetic experiential world of the landscape garden as an example of transfer within space and time."><meta name="copyright" content="IEG Mainz"> <meta name="google-site-verification" content="MJGOUQy7My8Aecc8deyTY6HwXqOTYaGiuYJT_gKFf2Y"> <meta property="fb:admins" content="100001928375895"> <meta property="og:site_name" content="EGO | Europäische Geschichte Online"> <meta property="og:type" content="article"> <meta property="og:email" content="egoredaktion@ieg-mainz.de"> <meta property="og:phone_number" content="+49 6131 39 393 50"> <meta property="og:fax_number" content="+49 6131 39 353 26"> <link rel="alternate" href="https://twitter.com/statuses/user_timeline/234792826.rss" title="Tweets von EGO bei Twitter.com" type="application/rss+xml"> <link rel="search" type="application/opensearchdescription+xml" title="EGO" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/egosearch.xml"> <!-- Icon Information for Google Chrome --> <!-- <meta name="application-name" content="Europäische Freimaurereien 1850-1935: Netzwerke und transnationale Bewegungen ::: EGO - Europäische Geschichte Online"/> --> <meta name="application-url" content="https://www.ieg-ego.eu"> <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://code.jquery.com/ui/1.9.1/themes/base/jquery-ui.css"> <script type="text/javascript" src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.8.2/jquery.min.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.9.1/jquery-ui.min.js"></script> <script src="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/js/css_browser_selector.js" type="text/javascript"></script> <script src="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/js/flowplayer-3.2.4.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script> <script src="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/js/carousel.js" type="text/javascript"></script> <link rel="Stylesheet" type="text/css" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/css/screen.css" media="screen, projection"> <link rel="Stylesheet" type="text/css" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/css/print.css" media="print"> <link rel="Stylesheet" type="text/css" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/css/carousel.css" media="screen, projection"> <title>The European Landscape Garden, ca. 1710–1800 — EGO </title> <meta name="DC.Publisher" content="IEG(http://www.ieg-mainz.de)"><meta name="DC.Title" content="The European Landscape Garden, ca. 1710–1800"><meta name="DC.Source" content="EGO(http://www.ieg-ego.eu)"><meta name="DC.Date.Issued" scheme="DCTERMS.W3CTDF" content="2017-07-03"><meta name="DC.Rights" content="CC by-nc-nd 3.0 Germany - Attribution, Noncommercial, No Derivative Works"><meta name="DC.Description" content="The history of landscape design in the 18th century offers numerous examples of transfer processes. This article investigates the emergence of the landscape garden around 1700 from a new concept of naturalness borrowed from classical antiquity. The change of paradigm from architecture to painting was an essential change of genre for the landscape garden. From about 1770 to 1800, an international discussion of the theory of gardens developed at a high level. The Anglo-Chinese garden contains all of the prerequisites for an encyclopaedic transfer of knowledge. Finally, the article deals with the kinaesthetic experiential world of the landscape garden as an example of transfer within space and time."><meta name="DC.Identifier" scheme="DCTERMS.URI" content="urn:nbn:de:0159-2017062338"><meta name="DC.Type" content="Text" scheme="DCMIType"><meta name="DC.Format" content="text/html" scheme="IMT"><meta name="DC.Publisher" content="IEG(http://www.ieg-mainz.de)"><meta name="generator" content="Plone - http://plone.com"></head> <body> <iframe id="manifest_iframe_hack" style="display: none;" src="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/temporary_manifest_hack.html"> </iframe> <div id="wrapper" class="container container_9"> <div id="header" class="grid_9"> <ul id="topmenu" class="smalltype"> <li class="first"> <a href="/en/ego">About EGO</a> </li> <li> <a href="/en/ego/contact">Contact</a> </li> <li> <a href="/en/ego/impressum">Legal Details</a> </li> <li class="last"> <a href="/en/ego/privacy">Privacy</a> </li> </ul> <ul id="languageselect" class="smalltype"> <li class="first"><a href="/lauterbachi-2012-de?set_language=de&-C=" title="Deutsch">Deutsch</a> |</li> <li class="last">English</li> </ul> <h1 id="sitelogo"> <a href="/" title="Back to Homepage"> <img src="/_theme/img/EGO_logotype_en.png" width="174" height="43" alt="EGO - European History Online"> </a> </h1> <ul id="mainmenu"> <li class="first top">Thread<span class="arrowdown">▾</span> <ul> <li><a href="/en/threads/theories-and-methods">Theories and Methods</a></li> <li><a href="/en/threads/backgrounds">Backgrounds</a></li> <li><a href="/en/threads/crossroads">Crossroads</a></li> <li><a href="/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes">Models and Stereotypes</a></li> <li><a href="/en/threads/europe-on-the-road">Europe on the Road</a></li> <li><a href="/en/threads/european-media">European Media</a></li> <li><a href="/en/threads/european-networks">European Networks</a></li> <li><a href="/en/threads/transnational-movements-and-organisations">Transnational Movements and Organisations</a></li> <li><a href="/en/threads/alliances-and-wars">Alliances and Wars</a></li> <li><a href="/en/threads/europe-and-the-world">Europe and the World</a></li> </ul> </li> <li class="top">Area<span class="arrowdown">▾</span> <ul> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&area=1&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending" title="area included in the basins of the Danube, Elbe, and Rhine rivers">Central Europe</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&area=0&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending" title="Albania, Bulgaria, European part of Turkey, Yugoslavia">Balkan Peninsula</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&area=5&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending" title="region extending from the western borders of Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, and Slovenia eastward to the Ural Mountains">Eastern Europe</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&area=2&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending" title="Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Åland, the Faroe Islands, Jan Mayen and Svalbard, the Baltic states (Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania)">Northern Europe</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&area=4&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending" title="the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, France, Great Britain, Ireland">Western Europe</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&area=3&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending" title="Iberian Peninsula, Italian Peninsula, Southern Balkan Peninsula, Mediterranean States (Malta, Cyprus)">Southern Europe</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&area=6&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Non-European World</a></li> </ul> </li> <li class="top">Topic<span class="arrowdown">▾</span> <ul> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&topic=0&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Education, Sciences</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&topic=1&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Arts</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&topic=2&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Social Matters, Society</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&topic=3&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Politics</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&topic=4&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Law, Constitution</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&topic=5&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Religion</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&topic=11&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Military</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&topic=6&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Migration, Travel</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&topic=7&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Media, Communication</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&topic=8&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Agents, Intermediaries</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&topic=9&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Theory, Methodology</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&topic=10&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">Economy, Technology</a></li> </ul> </li> <li class="last top">Time<span class="arrowdown">▾</span> <ul> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&timeframe=1450+OR+1460+OR+1470+OR+1480+OR+1490&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">15th Century</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&timeframe=1500+OR+1510+OR+1520+OR+1530+OR+1540+OR+1550+OR+1560+OR+1570+OR+1580+OR+1590&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">16th Century</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&timeframe=1600+OR+1610+OR+1620+OR+1630+OR+1640+OR+1650+OR+1660+OR+1670+OR+1680+OR+1690&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">17th Century</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&timeframe=1700+OR+1710+OR+1720+OR+1730+OR+1740+OR+1750+OR+1760+OR+1770+OR+1780+OR+1790&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">18th Century</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&timeframe=1800+OR+1810+OR+1820+OR+1830+OR+1840+OR+1850+OR+1860+OR+1870+OR+1880+OR+1890&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">19th Century</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&timeframe=1900+OR+1910+OR+1920+OR+1930+OR+1940+OR+1950+OR+1960+OR+1970+OR+1980+OR+1990&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">20th Century</a></li> <li><a href="/search?portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe&timeframe=2000+OR+2010&sort_on=effective&sort_order=descending">21st Century</a></li> </ul> </li> </ul> <div id="quicksearch"> <form method="get" action="/search"> <fieldset> <input id="qs_query" class="searchPage" type="text" name="SearchableText" data-alt="Search" value="Search"><input class="submit" type="submit" name="submit" value=" "> <input type="hidden" name="portal_type" value="Site"> <input type="hidden" name="Title" value="freigabe"> <input type="hidden" name="set_language" value="en"> </fieldset> </form> <p><a id="advancedsearch" class="smalltype" href="/advanced_search?set_language=en">Advanced Search</a></p> </div> </div> <!-- header --> <div class="clear"> </div> <div id="main"> <div id="side" class="grid_2 hyphenate"> <ul id="threadnavigation" class="navTree navTreeLevel0"> <li class="navTreeItem navTreeTopNode nav-section-models-and-stereotypes"> <p> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes" title="" class="contenttype-folder"> <span>Models and Stereotypes</span> </a> </p> <ul> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeItemInPath selected expanded navTreeFolderish section-anglophilia"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia" title="" class="state-published navTreeItemInPath selected expanded navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Anglophilia</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel1"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-horst-dippel-british-and-american-constitutional"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/horst-dippel-british-and-american-constitutional-and-democratic-models-18th-20th-century" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>British and American Constitutional Models</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-michael-maurer-die-entstehung-des-sports-in"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/michael-maurer-die-entstehung-des-sports-in-england-im-18-jahrhundert" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Entstehung des Sports in England</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeCurrentNode selected expanded this section-iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca"> <p> <span class="this-indicator"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800" title="" class="state-published navTreeCurrentItem navTreeCurrentItem navTreeCurrentNode selected expanded this contenttype-site"> <span>European Landscape Garden</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-klaus-dieter-ertler-moral-weeklies-periodical"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/klaus-dieter-ertler-moral-weeklies-periodical-essays" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Moral Weeklies</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-gauti-kristmannsson-ossian-the-european-national"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/gauti-kristmannsson-ossian-the-european-national-epic-1760-1810" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Ossian</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-sophie-chiari-shakespeare"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/sophie-chiari-shakespeare" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Shakespeare</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-michael-maurer-vom-mutterland-des-sports-zum"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/michael-maurer-vom-mutterland-des-sports-zum-kontinent-der-transfer-des-englischen-sports-im-19-jahrhundert" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Transfer des englischen Sports</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-the-dutch-century"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/the-dutch-century" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>"Dutch Century"</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel1"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-rina-knoeff-dutch-anatomy-and-clinical-medicine-in"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/the-dutch-century/rina-knoeff-dutch-anatomy-and-clinical-medicine-in-17th-century-europe" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Dutch Anatomy</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-gabriele-mentges-european-fashion-1450-1950"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/gabriele-mentges-european-fashion-1450-1950" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>European Fashion</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-from-the-turkish-menace-to-orientalism"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/from-the-turkish-menace-to-orientalism" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>From the "Turkish Menace" to Orientalism</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel1"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-emrah-safa-gurkan-christian-allies-of-the-ottoman"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/from-the-turkish-menace-to-orientalism/emrah-safa-gurkan-christian-allies-of-the-ottoman-empire" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Christian Allies of the Ottoman Empire</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-mariano-delgado-contra-turcos-the-church-in-the"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/from-the-turkish-menace-to-orientalism/mariano-delgado-contra-turcos-the-church-in-the-discourse-regarding-the-turkish-threat" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Church and 'Turkish Threat'</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-anne-duprat-literary-transfers-between-the-orient"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/from-the-turkish-menace-to-orientalism/anne-duprat-literary-transfers-between-the-orient-and-the-west-17th-20th-century" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>East West Literary Transfers</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-richard-potz-islam-and-islamic-law-in-european"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/from-the-turkish-menace-to-orientalism/richard-potz-islam-and-islamic-law-in-european-legal-history" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Islam and Islamic Law</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-virginia-h-aksan-islam-christian-transfers-of"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/from-the-turkish-menace-to-orientalism/virginia-h-aksan-islam-christian-transfers-of-military-technology-1730-1918" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Islam-Christian Transfers of Military Technology</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-christine-vogel-istanbul-as-a-hub-of-early-modern"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/from-the-turkish-menace-to-orientalism/christine-vogel-istanbul-as-a-hub-of-early-modern-european-diplomacy" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Istanbul as a hub of early modern European diplomacy</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-sara-marie-demiriz-kemalism-the-turkish-model-of-a"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/from-the-turkish-menace-to-orientalism/sara-marie-demiriz-kemalism-the-turkish-model-of-a-secular-republic" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Kemalism</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-markus-koller-ottoman-history-of-south-east-europe"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/from-the-turkish-menace-to-orientalism/markus-koller-ottoman-history-of-south-east-europe" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Ottoman History of South-East Europe</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-rolando-minuti-oriental-despotism"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/from-the-turkish-menace-to-orientalism/rolando-minuti-oriental-despotism" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Oriental Despotism</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-germanophilia-and-germanophobia"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/germanophilia-and-germanophobia" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>German Role Models</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel1"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-deutsche-musik-in-europa"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/germanophilia-and-germanophobia/deutsche-musik-in-europa" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Deutsche Musik in Europa</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel2"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-yvonne-wasserloos-christian-frederik-emil-horneman"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/germanophilia-and-germanophobia/deutsche-musik-in-europa/yvonne-wasserloos-christian-frederik-emil-horneman-1840-1906" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Christian Frederik Emil Horneman</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-yvonne-wasserloos-musikalischer-kulturtransfer-von"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/germanophilia-and-germanophobia/deutsche-musik-in-europa/yvonne-wasserloos-musikalischer-kulturtransfer-von-leipzig-nach-kopenhagen-im-19-jahrhundert" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Kulturtransfer Leipzig Kopenhagen</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-niels-wilhelm-gade-1817-1890-niels-wilhelm-gade-ve"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/germanophilia-and-germanophobia/deutsche-musik-in-europa/niels-wilhelm-gade-1817-1890-niels-wilhelm-gade-ve-freigabe" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Niels Wilhelm Gade</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-bas-van-bommel-between-bildung-and-wissenschaft"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/germanophilia-and-germanophobia/bas-van-bommel-between-bildung-and-wissenschaft-the-19th-century-german-ideal-of-scientific-education" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>German Education and Science</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-joerg-marquardt-germanophilie-im-deutschen"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/germanophilia-and-germanophobia/joerg-marquardt-germanophilie-im-deutschen-judentum-im-19-jahrhundert" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Germanophilie im Judentum</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-karol-sauerland-wertherfieber"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/germanophilia-and-germanophobia/karol-sauerland-wertherfieber" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Wertherfieber</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-graecomania-and-philhellenism"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/graecomania-and-philhellenism" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Graecomania and Philhellenism</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel1"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-christlicher-hellenismus-christlicher-hellenismus"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/graecomania-and-philhellenism/christlicher-hellenismus-christlicher-hellenismus-be-freigabe" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Christlicher Hellenismus</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-model-america"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-america" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Model America</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel1"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-susanne-hilger-the-americanisation-of-the-european"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-america/susanne-hilger-the-americanisation-of-the-european-economy-after-1880" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Americanisation of the Economy</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-thomas-raithel-amerika-als-herausforderung-in"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-america/thomas-raithel-amerika-als-herausforderung-in-deutschland-und-frankreich-in-den-1920er-jahren" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>"Amerika" in Deutschland und Frankreich</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-us-film-in-europa-us-film-in-europa-be"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-america/us-film-in-europa-us-film-in-europa-be-vorankundigung2012" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>US-Film in Europa</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-model-classical-antiquity"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-classical-antiquity" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Model Classical Antiquity</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel1"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-ulrich-volp-idealisierung-der-urkirche-ecclesia"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-classical-antiquity/ulrich-volp-idealisierung-der-urkirche-ecclesia-primitiva" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Idealisierung der Urkirche</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-gregor-emmenegger-die-kongregation-von-saint-maur"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-classical-antiquity/gregor-emmenegger-die-kongregation-von-saint-maur-mauriner-und-ihre-kirchenvaetereditionen" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Kongregation von Saint-Maur</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-valerie-mainz-model-hercules"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-classical-antiquity/valerie-mainz-model-hercules" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Model Hercules</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-rezeption-der-griechisch-roemischen-medizin"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-classical-antiquity/rezeption-der-griechisch-roemischen-medizin" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Rezeption der griechisch-römischen Medizin</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel2"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-juergen-helm-galen-rezeption-im-16-jahrhundert"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-classical-antiquity/rezeption-der-griechisch-roemischen-medizin/juergen-helm-galen-rezeption-im-16-jahrhundert-philipp-melanchthon" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Galen-Rezeption Melanchthons</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-daniel-schaefer-die-rolle-der-medizinischen"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-classical-antiquity/rezeption-der-griechisch-roemischen-medizin/daniel-schaefer-die-rolle-der-medizinischen-humanisten-im-kulturtransfer-antike-renaissance" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Medizinische Humanisten</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-lorena-atzeri-roman-law-and-reception"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-classical-antiquity/lorena-atzeri-roman-law-and-reception" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Roman Law and Reception</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-edgar-hoesch-die-idee-der-translatio-imperii-im"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-classical-antiquity/edgar-hoesch-die-idee-der-translatio-imperii-im-moskauer-russland" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Translatio Imperii im Moskauer Russland</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-model-europe"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-europe" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Model Europe</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel1"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-georg-kreis-concepts-of-europe-federalism-federal"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-europe/georg-kreis-concepts-of-europe-federalism-federal-state-confederation-of-states" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Concepts of Europe</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-matthias-schulz-europa-netzwerke-und-europagedanke"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-europe/matthias-schulz-europa-netzwerke-und-europagedanke-in-der-zwischenkriegszeit" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Europa-Netzwerke der Zwischenkriegszeit</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-veronika-lipphardt-und-kiran-klaus-patel-auf-der"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-europe/veronika-lipphardt-und-kiran-klaus-patel-auf-der-suche-nach-dem-europaeer.-wissenschaftliche-konstruktionen-des-homo-europaeus" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Homo Europaeus</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-model-germania"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-germania" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Model Germania</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-model-italy"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-italy" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Model Italy</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-modernization"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/modernization" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Modernization</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-racism"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/racism" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Racism</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-russification-sovietization"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/russification-sovietization" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Russification / Sovietization</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel1"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-stephan-merl-sovietization-in-the-economy-and"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/russification-sovietization/stephan-merl-sovietization-in-the-economy-and-agriculture" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Economy and Agriculture</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-stephan-merl-sowjetisierung-in-wirtschaft-und"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/russification-sovietization/stephan-merl-sowjetisierung-in-wirtschaft-und-landwirtschaft" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Wirtschaft und Landwirtschaft</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-ada-raev-russifizierung-sowjetisierung-in-kultur"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/russification-sovietization/ada-raev-russifizierung-sowjetisierung-in-kultur-und-gesellschaft" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Kultur und Gesellschaft</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-ada-raev-russification-sovietization-in-culture"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/russification-sovietization/ada-raev-russification-sovietization-in-culture-and-society" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Culture and Society</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-the-spanish-century"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/the-spanish-century" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>"Spanish Century"</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel1"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-friedrich-edelmayer-the-leyenda-negra-and-the"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/the-spanish-century/friedrich-edelmayer-the-leyenda-negra-and-the-circulation-of-anti-catholic-and-anti-spanish-prejudices" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>"Leyenda Negra"</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-the-west-as-enemy"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/the-west-as-enemy" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>The "West" as Enemy</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker navTreeFolderish section-the-versailles-model"> <p> <span class="contract-expand"> </span> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/the-versailles-model" title="" class="state-published navTreeFolderish contenttype-folder"> <span>Versailles Model</span> </a> </p> <ul class="navTree navTreeLevel1"> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-peter-jones-enlightenment-philosophy"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/the-versailles-model/peter-jones-enlightenment-philosophy" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Enlightenment Philosophy</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-ivana-rentsch-franzoesische-musik"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/the-versailles-model/ivana-rentsch-franzoesische-musik" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Französische Musik</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-thorsten-roelcke-lingua-franca-und"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/the-versailles-model/thorsten-roelcke-lingua-franca-und-verkehrssprachen" title="" class="state-missing-value contenttype-link"> <span>Lingua Franca und Verkehrssprachen</span> </a> </p> </li> <li class="navTreeItem visualNoMarker section-thorsten-roelcke-lingua-franca"> <p> <!-- tal:attributes IS overriden FROM href python:item_remote_url if use_remote_url else item_url --> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/the-versailles-model/thorsten-roelcke-lingua-franca" title="" class="state-published contenttype-site"> <span>Lingua Franca</span> </a> </p> </li> </ul> </li> </ul> </li> </ul> </div> <div id="content" class="grid_5"> <h1><span id="parent-fieldname-title" class="hyphenate">The European Landscape Garden, ca. 1710–1800</span></h1> <div class="documentByLine" id="document-byline"> <span class="property documentAuthor"> <span class="de">von </span> <span class="en">by </span> Iris Lauterbach<span></span></span> <span class="property documentLanguage"><span class="de">Original auf</span><span class="en">Original in</span> <span id="originallanguage_top">German</span>, <span class="de">angezeigt auf</span><span class="en">displayed in</span> <span id="articlelangselector"><a href="" id="articlelanguage_top">English</a><ul id="avllist"><li><a href="/lauterbachi-2012-de"><span class="languagename_short">de</span><span class="languagename"><span class="de">Deutsch</span><span class="en">German</span></span></a></li><li><a href="/lauterbachi-2012-en"><span class="languagename_short">en</span><span class="languagename"><span class="de">Englisch</span><span class="en">English</span></span></a></li></ul></span><span class="arrowdown">▾</span></span> <br> <span class="documentModified"> <span class="en">Published</span><span class="de">Erschienen</span>: <span id="dateselector"> <span id="publicationsdate_top" href="#">2017-07-03</span> <ul id="datelist" class="select-popup"></ul> </span> </span> <a class="printthis" onclick="window.print(); return false;" href="#"> <img class="en" src="/_theme/img/print_12x12.png" alt="Print" title="Print"> <img class="de" src="/_theme/img/print_12x12.png" alt="Drucken" title="Drucken"> </a> <span id="emailauthorlink"><!-- --><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/author/lauterbachi"><!-- --><img class="en" alt="E-mail" src="/_theme/img/mail_12x12.png" title="E-mail the author"><!-- --><img class="de" alt="E-mail" src="/_theme/img/mail_12x12.png" title="E-Mail an den Autor"></a> </span> <a id="dcexport" class="xmlexport link-trailing-slash" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800/dcexport"><!-- --><img class="en" src="/_theme/img/xml_12x12.png" alt="XML Metadata" title="save metadata as XML"><!-- --><img class="de" src="/_theme/img/xml_12x12.png" alt="XML Metadaten" title="Metadaten als XML speichern"> </a>    <span id="form-widgets-shorttitle" style="display:none">European Landscape Garden ca. 1710</span> </div> <p class="documentDescription"> <span id="parent-fieldname-description" class="hyphenate">The history of landscape design in the 18th century offers numerous examples of transfer processes. This article investigates the emergence of the landscape garden around 1700 from a new concept of naturalness borrowed from classical antiquity. The change of paradigm from architecture to painting was an essential change of genre for the landscape garden. From about 1770 to 1800, an international discussion of the theory of gardens developed at a high level. The Anglo-Chinese garden contains all of the prerequisites for an encyclopaedic transfer of knowledge. Finally, the article deals with the kinaesthetic experiential world of the landscape garden as an example of transfer within space and time.</span> </p> <dl class="portlet toc" id="document-toc"> <dt class="portletHeader"><span class="de">Inhaltsverzeichnis</span><span class="en">Table of Contents</span></dt> <dd class="portletItem"></dd> </dl> <div id="parent-fieldname-text" class="hyphenate"> <div id="articlebody"> <div class="fieldErrorBox"></div> <span id="tableOfContents" data-toc="true"></span> <h2>Introduction</h2> <p>In the area of landscape design, numerous transfer processes occurred in the 18th century that not only affected the landscape garden. These processes occurred primarily between <span class="external-geo-link-container" itemscope="itemscope" itemtype="http://schema.org/Place"><a itemprop="url" class="external-geo-link" data-class="external-geo-link" href="http://d-nb.info/gnd/4027833-5">Italy</a></span>, <span class="external-geo-link-container" itemscope="itemscope" itemtype="http://schema.org/Place"><a itemprop="url" class="external-geo-link" data-class="external-geo-link" href="http://d-nb.info/gnd/4014770-8">England</a></span>, <span class="external-geo-link-container" itemscope="itemscope" itemtype="http://schema.org/Place"><a itemprop="url" class="external-geo-link" data-class="external-geo-link" href="http://d-nb.info/gnd/4018145-5">France </a></span>and <span class="external-geo-link-container" itemscope="itemscope" itemtype="http://schema.org/Place"><a itemprop="url" class="external-geo-link" data-class="external-geo-link" href="http://d-nb.info/gnd/4011882-4">Germany</a></span>, though influences from outside Europe also played a role (the Anglo-Chinese garden).<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_0_marker1"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_0">1</a></sup></span> This involved – in the literal and figurative sense – "border crossings" in the areas of the history of the humanities and the history of science, and artistic as well as professional-sociological phenomena. The discussion below cannot give a complete picture of the variants and development of the landscape garden. Instead, it picks out a number of aspects and examples of cultural and knowledge transfer in the area of landscape design in the 18th century.</p> <p>The stylistic term "landscape garden" and the occupational title "landscape gardener" were only introduced and discussed at the end of the 18th century in the writings of the English landscape designer and theoretician <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/59118518" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Humphry Repton (1752–1818)</a>.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_2_marker3"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_2">2</a></sup></span> Prior to that, terms such as "natürlicher" (natural), "neuer Gartengeschmack" (new taste in gardens) and "neue Gartenmanier" (new manner of garden)<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_4_marker5"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_4">3</a></sup></span> had been used to refer to a garden style that, though it drew on international sources, was nonetheless predominantly perceived by contemporaries as a "neue[r] Geschmack der Britten, der die Regelmäßigkeit und Einförmigkeit verbannte und wahre Schönheit der Natur in die Gärten rief",<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_6_marker7"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_6">4</a></sup></span> as the German garden theoretician <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/56749807" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Christian Cay Lorenz Hirschfeld (1742–1792)">Christian Cay Lorenz Hirschfeld (1742–1792)</a> put it in 1782. From about 1700, there was a movement towards more naturalness in the arrangement of gardens, which expressed itself in the French garden as well as in early forms of the landscape garden. It was not until the second third of the century that specific features of the structure and lines, of the vegetation and scale, of the view and of the impact on walkers had developed to the point that they were recognized as distinguishing features for the description of the landscape garden in contrast with the classical French garden.</p> <p>From the late-16th century onward, landscape design had outgrown its connection with agriculture and horticulture, and during the course of the 17th and 18th centuries it became a sister discipline of architecture, painting and poetry. The diversity of arrangements of gardens, which were now intended to inspire the mind and the emotions, was discussed in the context of the artistic discourse of a European <a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/de/threads/europaeische-netzwerke/intellektuelle-und-wissenschaftliche-netzwerke/res-publica-litterarum" title="Res publica litterarum"><i>Société des lettres</i></a>. This debate took place in gardening textbooks, theoretical treatises, as well as in the gardening journals that were published in increasing numbers from the 1790s onward, particularly by German publishers.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_8_marker9"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_8">5</a></sup></span> In the 18th century, the fundamental questions of this debate revolved around the perception of nature and its imitation in art. The stylistic battle lines were drawn with the key terms of regularity vs. irregularity, the French vs. the English garden. However, the processes of reception and transfer that resulted from about 1700 onwards in the spread of new, more natural garden forms – of which the landscape garden was the most prominent phenomenon – were more complex. Similar to the understanding of nature in the 18th century, the "naturalness" of landscape design had many facets. It was not automatically linked to a specific style, rather it was a more nuanced mode of garden arrangement, which drew from various sources. From the first decade of the 18th century, the "naturalness" of landscape design was viewed as new and exemplary, and it was developed both in theory and in practice, with France and England taking divergent paths.</p> <h2>Prerequisites: A New Concept of Naturalness around 1700 in English and French Garden Theory</h2> <p>Around 1700, there were noticeable efforts both in English and in French garden design to establish a new naturalness in the design of gardens. These efforts influenced each other and were reflected in the theoretical literature.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_10_marker11"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_10">6</a></sup></span> <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/61618191/" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Antoine-Joseph Dezallier d'Argenville (1680–1765)">Antoine-Joseph Dezallier d'Argenville's (1680–1765)</a> treatise <i>La théorie et la pratique du jardinage</i>, which was published in <span class="external-geo-link-container" itemscope="itemscope" itemtype="http://schema.org/Place"><a itemprop="url" class="external-geo-link" data-class="external-geo-link" href="http://d-nb.info/gnd/4044660-8">Paris </a></span>in 1709, summarized the design motifs and principles of the classical French garden for the first time and also formulated a new, more natural garden concept. The book was also very popular in England.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_12_marker13"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_12">7</a></sup></span> The second, expanded edition (1713) contained a phrase that expressed for the first time a new understanding of nature and made this understanding a model for landscape design: "Faire céder l'Art à la Nature" ("to make art yield to nature").<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_14_marker15"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_14">8</a></sup></span> In English garden theory of the 17th century – as in France – there had been calls for the imitation of nature in gardens, though this did not automatically lead to irregular garden designs.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_16_marker17"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_16">9</a></sup></span> Early concepts of the English landscape garden and the stronger orientation towards nature called for in Dezallier d'Argenville's treatise are phenomena which developed in parallel.</p> <p>Winding paths or other forms of paths that suggest "naturalness" are not mentioned by Dezallier d'Argenville. In his understanding, naturalness does not manifest itself in the plan or the layout, but rather – as the example of the garden of Marly demonstrates – in the terrain modelling and the vegetation, and in particular in the use of lawns and entwined latticework (<i>Treillage</i>)<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/terrain-modelling-with-lawn-laying" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Terrain Modelling with Lawn Laying"><img alt="Terrainmodellierung mit Rasenbelag IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/terrainmodellierung-mit-rasenbelag-img/@@images/image/thumb" title="Terrainmodellierung mit Rasenbelag IMG"></a>. Both in French and in English garden design of the early-18th century, there was an increasing emphasis on the use of the colour green, which was probably a result of the influence of classical antiquity. The green colour of natural vegetation is often emphasized in the letters of <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/10638270" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Pliny the Younger (61/62–ca. 114)">Pliny the Younger (61/62–ca. 114)</a>. No theoretical text on gardens from the modern era places such emphasis on broad green spaces that can be, and are intended to be walked on, and the view of which is pleasing to the eye. It is thus no coincidence that both French and English literature and architectural theory were so preoccupied with descriptions of Tuscum and Laurentinum, the two villas of Pliny the Younger, from around 1680 onward.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_18_marker19"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_18">10</a></sup></span> The Frenchman Jean-François Félibien des Avaux (1658–1733) (in 1699)<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/reconstruction-of-the-villa-tuscum" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Reconstruction of the Villa Tuscum"><img alt="Rekonstruktion der Villa Tuscum IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/rekonstruktion-der-villa-tuscum-img/@@images/image/thumb" title="Rekonstruktion der Villa Tuscum IMG"></a> and the Englishman <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/2807707" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Robert Castell (died. 1729)</a> (in 1728) even reconstructed these two ideal gardens by bringing together all the means and possibilities of natural and artificial landscape arrangement of their time.</p> <p>In his work <i>La géométrie pratique</i> (1702), the French cartographer and fortifications engineer <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/19804506" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Allain Manesson Mallet (ca. 1630–ca. 1706)</a> described the practical applications of geometry and its subdisciplines of trigonometry, planimetry and stereometry. He illustrated many of his descriptions with views of gardens<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/jardins-de-versailles-en-general" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Jardins de Versailles en général"><img alt="Jardins de Versailles en général IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/jardins-de-versailles-en-general/@@images/image/thumb" title="Jardins de Versailles en général IMG"></a> as a knowledge of mathematics, geometry, optics and perspective had been a prerequisite for the design of gardens from the early-17th century. This work greatly influenced authors of books about gardens in the early-18th century. Thus, for example, Dezallier d'Argenville provided for the first time stereometric representations of gardens (see fig. 1). In his publication <i>Ichnographia Rustica</i> (1718, 2nd edition in 1742), the English gardener and author <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/69871428/" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Stephen Switzer (ca. 1682–1745)</a> also draws on Manesson Mallet's work and like the latter he discusses not only the mapping, measurement and transposition of straight and regular lines, bodies and shapes, but also curved and irregular ones. These are all described as tasks of practical geometry. Switzer and the gardener <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/4919216" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Batty Langley (1696–1751)</a>, the author of <i>New Principles of Gardening</i> (1728), both viewed curved and winding lines as an expression of naturalness, and the straight line as the epitome of unnatural design. Langley designed gardens in which the regular structures of the classical French style were overlaid with irregular lines. However, his attempt – which he referred to as "improvement" – to depart from customary lines and shapes and to make an artificial lack of order a design concept<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/an-improvement-of-the-labyrinth-at-versailes" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="An Improvement of the Labyrinth at Versailes"><img alt="An Improvement of the Labyrinth at Versailes IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/an-improvement-of-the-labyrinth-at-versailes-img/@@images/image/thumb" title="An Improvement of the Labyrinth at Versailes IMG"></a> was not considered convincing and was viewed as unnatural. The juxtaposition of regular and winding lines was described by <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/17268409" rel="noopener" target="_blank">William Hogarth (1697–1764)</a> in his <i>Analysis of Beauty</i> (1753). As a much cited art-theoretical line concept, the "line of beauty", an s-shaped winding line<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/the-analysis-of-beauty" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="The Analysis of Beauty"><img alt="The Analysis of Beauty IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/the-analysis-of-beauty-img/@@images/image/thumb" title="The Analysis of Beauty IMG"></a>, greatly influenced the layout of the landscape garden.</p> <h2>Transfer between Media and Genres: Landscape Design and Painting</h2> <h3>Antiquity as a Model</h3> <p>The comparison with <a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/model-classical-antiquity/ulrich-niggemann-kai-ruffing-model-classical-antiquity">classical antiquity</a> was of fundamental structural importance for how natural landscapes and the composition of garden spaces were viewed. Pliny's descriptions of villas referred to above were among the source texts that were discussed in practically every text on garden and landscape design from the Renaissance, and particularly from the late-17th century onward. They describe a more complex arrangement of views and the visual interrelationship between the interior and the exterior, between architecture, garden and landscape, a surprising, nuanced interplay involving the transformation of three-dimensional natural spaces into two dimensional images – and vice versa, when the visitor to the villa steps out of the building. The concept of a unified, artistic spatial effect and simultaneously of a genre transfer between building and garden was greatly stimulated and expanded by translations of Pliny and commentaries on his work.</p> <p>In 1709, the English painter <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/87717909" rel="noopener" target="_blank">William Kent (1685–1748)</a> travelled to Italy, a sojourn which had a great influence on him artistically, and from which he only returned home ten years later.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_20_marker21"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_20">11</a></sup></span> His new concept of landscape design, which was influenced by antiquity and modern Italy, and which was based on the artistic work of the painter and theatre decorator, initiated the first phase of the development of the landscape garden. With his statement "All gardening is landscape painting",<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_22_marker23"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_22">12</a></sup></span> the poet <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/61551003" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Alexander Pope (1688–1744)</a> formulated a paradigm shift in the design process and thus also in the professional image of the gardener – he should now change from an architect to a painter.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_24_marker25"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_24">13</a></sup></span></p> <p>The development of the landscape garden was accompanied by an interest in, and engagement with 17th-century landscape painting in England. This began in the second decade of the 18th century and ran parallel to an art-theoretical debate, which had been ongoing from the late-17th century, regarding landscape painting and its position in the hierarchy of genres of painting.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_26_marker27"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_26">14</a></sup></span> The popularity of the paintings of <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/54156251" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Claude Lorrain (1600–1682)</a>, <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/24606800" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Nicolas Poussin (ca. 1594–1665)</a>, <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/74122123" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Gaspard Dughet (1615–1675)</a> and of the Italian <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/46830369/" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Salvator Rosa (1615–1673)</a> from the early-18th century in England was a complementary trend. "O great Poussin! O Nature's darling, Claude!" With these lines in his poem <i>The English Garden</i>, published 1772–1781, the poet <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/95718679" rel="noopener" target="_blank">William Mason (1725–1797)</a> addresses the masters of landscape art, whose compositions were full of delightful "charms", "graces" and "fresh beauties" and were a model for landscape designers.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_28_marker29"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_28">15</a></sup></span> Mason subsequently names "Salvator!" (Salvator Rosa), who offers examples of "majestic scenes" and is perceived as a protagonist of the sublime in landscape painting.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_30_marker31"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_30">16</a></sup></span> From the early-18th century, works by the painters referred to above were to be found in practically all large collections held by English aristocrats and members of the gentry. The English "Claude fashion" of the 18th century was initially a phenomenon of the early period of tourism and of collection history, as well as of a phase of the "history of taste".<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_32_marker33"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_32">17</a></sup></span> This appreciation for the idyllic and heroic landscapes of Claude, Poussin, Dughet and Rosa was supported by the transfer of their principles of style and composition into poetry.</p> <h3>Grand Tour and Landscape Design</h3> <p>In England, the development of a new natural garden concept was driven by writers, painters and architects who were familiar with current art-theoretical debates and most of whom had travelled Italy. The <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/41846508/" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Anthony Ashley Cooper of Shaftesbury (1671–1713) ">Earl of Shaftesbury (1671–1713)</a> lived in Italy from 1711 onward. <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/7413288/" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Joseph Addison (1672–1719)</a> travelled through France and Italy on a <a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/threads/europe-on-the-road/educational-journey-grand-tour/mathis-leibetseder-educational-journey-grand-tour">grand tour</a> between 1699 and 1703. The painter William Kent lived in Italy for the period 1709–1719. <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/61395521/" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Richard Boyle of Burlington (1694–1753)">Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington (1694–1753)</a>, travelled to Italy a number of times between 1714 and 1726. Alexander Pope, by contrast, had no first-hand experience of Italy.</p> <p>Landscape paintings offered an artistic concept and a model for poetic mood, but no template was directly adopted from them. The classical temples, nymphaeums, exedras and grottos in the early English landscape gardens of the 1730s to the 1750s transformed the gardens in the perception of walkers into intellectual and associative free spaces. They were as much references to real or reconstructed buildings in the <span class="external-geo-link-container" itemscope="itemscope" itemtype="http://schema.org/Place"><a itemprop="url" class="external-geo-link" data-class="external-geo-link" href="http://d-nb.info/gnd/4117068-4">Roman Campagna</a></span> as ideal landscape paintings are. The educated visitor and observer understood the artistic, literary, historical and political allusions of the garden scenes, which in his/her eyes were superimposed with works of painting. The variety of classical references in William Kent's gardens has often been discussed.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_34_marker35"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_34">18</a></sup></span> The grouping of groves is indicative of his experience as a theatre decorator. Kent, who had not only seen paintings by Claude Lorrain in the original but also the latter's collection of drawings of his own compositions, the so-called "Liber veritatis", described his pictorially designed gardens as "picturesque".<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_36_marker37"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_36">19</a></sup></span></p> <p>If one looks at depictions of early landscape gardens as found in the second series of the <i>Vitruvius Britannicus</i> published from 1739 onward, then a mode of representation stands out that was not adopted from painting, but from early-modern urban planning. Arranged around the plan of the garden are small pictures that draw attention to the individual garden structures. The depiction of the garden of Chiswick<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/plan-du-jardin-vues-des-maisons-de-chiswick" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Plan du Jardin, & Vuës des Maisons de Chiswick"><img alt="Plan du Jardin, & Vuës des Maisons de Chiswick IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/plan-du-jardin-vues-des-maison-de-chiswick/@@images/image/thumb" title="Plan du Jardin, & Vuës des Maisons de Chiswick IMG"></a> – Lord Burlington enlisted the help of Kent in designing it from 1729 onward<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_38_marker39"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_38">20</a></sup></span> – is divided up in this way into a plan in which the path axes dominate and the <i>Fabriques </i>(small garden structures) are deliberately depicted individually at the end of the axes. This does not communicate the space continuum of an ideal landscape painting, but instead shows the individual structures pictorially.</p> <h3>Stowe and Stourhead</h3> <p>The garden of Stowe House in <span class="external-geo-link-container" itemscope="itemscope" itemtype="http://schema.org/Place"><a itemprop="url" class="external-geo-link" data-class="external-geo-link" href="http://d-nb.info/gnd/4069709-5">Buckinghamshire</a></span> is perhaps the most famous early English landscape garden. In 1744, <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/264365573" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Benton Seeley (1716–1795)</a> devoted the first garden guidebook ever published to it, undoubtedly due to the great interest that British and foreign artists and aristocratic visitors had shown in it.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_40_marker41"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_40">21</a></sup></span> The garden was created in a number of phases from the second decade of the 18th century<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/general-plan-of-the-most-noble-house-gardens-of-the-earl-temple-at-stow" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="General Plan of the most Noble House & Gardens of the Earl Temple at Stow"><img alt="General Plan of the most Noble House & Gardens of the Earl Temple at Stow IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/general-plan-of-the-most-noble-house-gardens-of-the-earl-temple-at-stow/@@images/image/thumb" title="General Plan of the most Noble House & Gardens of the Earl Temple at Stow IMG"></a>. The architect Sir <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/7398042" rel="noopener" target="_blank">John Vanbrugh (1664–1726)</a> – who built the first monopteros (round temple) in the garden, the so-called "Rotunda" – and the landscape designer <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/239381998" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Charles Bridgeman (1690–1738)</a> were followed after 1738 by Kent and the architect James Gibbs (1682–1754). <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/10121958" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Lancelot Brown (1716–1783)</a> expanded the complex up to 1751.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_42_marker43"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_42">22</a></sup></span> Kent's "Elysian Fields" and Brown's "Grecian Valley" are a classical grove and a Greek valley replete with allusions and juxtapositions of antiquity and the modern period, of past virtue and the modern political example, as expressed in many of the names of the temples. The numerous temples and structures that were erected in the garden of Stowe appear to reference the family name of the owner, <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/25408546" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Richard Temple (1669–1749)</a>, and the family motto "Templa quam dilecta" ("How beautiful the temples are"). The connecting views between the staffage structures (which were mainly built at the edge of the garden) and the country house itself across the broad grass and water surfaces of the complex structure the garden landscape<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/the-garden-of-stowe" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="The Garden of Stowe"><img alt="Der Garten von Stowe IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/der-garten-von-stowe-img/@@images/image/thumb" title="Der Garten von Stowe IMG"></a>. At the invitation of the gardener Charles Bridgeman, the French copperplate engraver <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/2739401" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Jacques Rigaud (1681–1754)</a> made a series of engravings of the landscape garden of Chiswick, which were commissioned by Lord Burlington, and of Stowe, which were commissioned by Lord Cobham, at the end of the 1730s.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_44_marker45"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_44">23</a></sup></span> Rigaud conveyed the three-dimensional garden spaces in unusually large copperplate engravings that are pictorial in character, and which he brought to life with many staffage figures. The staffage of the print-graphical vedutas of Rigaud has the effect that the landscape garden in its medial transformation from a three-dimensional space to a two-dimensional image becomes closer to a landscape painting, which is invariably also populated with figures.</p> <p>The garden of Stourhead is another example of medial transfer from painting to a garden.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_46_marker47"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_46">24</a></sup></span> <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/20845756" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Henry Hoare (jun.) (1705–1785)">Henry Hoare (jun.) (1705–1785)</a>, the owner of the garden, spent the period 1738–1741 on a grand tour in Italy. In 1743, he began arranging the garden complex, which was created away from the country house as a separate spatial creation around a specially-dammed lake. He described the view from the Pantheon onto the <a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/threads/europe-on-the-road/educational-journey-grand-tour/carsten-ruhl-palladianism" title="Palladianism: From the Italian Villa to International Architecture">Palladian </a>bridge and the church as a landscape painting<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/the-garden-of-stourhead" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="The Garden of Stourhead"><img alt="Der Garten von Stourhead IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/der-garten-von-stourhead-img/@@images/image/thumb" title="Der Garten von Stourhead IMG"></a>. Stourhead is a lush-green southern English landscape that – in the eyes and emotions of the artistically cultivated observer and walker – has been transformed into the Roman Campagna. William Mason's didactic poem <i>The English Garden</i> already referred to above discusses in detail the medial transfer from painting to landscape design. His formulation "scenes like these, on Memory's tablet drawn, bring back to Britain"<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_48_marker49"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_48">25</a></sup></span> describes the creation of a garden as an art of memory and visualisation. As the painter replaced the architect as the creative role model for the landscape designer as a visual artist, the qualifications of the painter were supplemented with those of the "landscapist", a term that from the late-18th century included the landscape designer, the painter and the poet. <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/17231985">Horace Walpole (1717–1797)</a>, for example, wrote the following in 1773: "Poetry, Painting and Gardening, or the science of Landscape, will forever by men of Taste be deemed Three Sisters, or the 'Three New Graces' who dress and adorn Nature."<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_50_marker51"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_50">26</a></sup></span></p> <p>In the influence of painting on landscape design, there are national differences which can also be explained in terms of differences in the history of collecting. The Garden Kingdom of Dessau-Wörlitzer, which was created from the 1760s onward on the commission of Prince <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/3273094/" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Leopold III. von Anhalt-Dessau (1740–1817)">Leopold Friedrich Franz von Anhalt-Dessau (1740–1817)</a>, drew on English examples, but not necessarily ideal landscape painting. With architectural elements, terrain modelling and garden spaces, the architect <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/67262469" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Friedrich Wilhelm von Erdmannsdorff (1736–1800)</a> employed by the prince formed a European topography of memory, which combines reminiscences of England, Italy and France, as well as of antiquity. In his didactic poem <i>Les jardins, ou l'art d'embellir les paysages</i> published in 1782, <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/59081234" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Jacques Delille (1738–1813)</a> showed that painting was replacing architecture as the artistic model and guiding genre of landscape design<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/painting-challenges-architecture-for-control-of-landscape-design" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Painting Challenges Architecture for Control of Landscape Design"><img alt="Die Malerei macht der Architektur die Gartenkunst streitig IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/die-malerei-macht-der-architektur-die-gartenkunst-streitig/@@images/image/thumb" title="Die Malerei macht der Architektur die Gartenkunst streitig IMG"></a>. The Kiel philosophy professor Christian Cay Lorenz Hirschfeld, who wrote <i>Theorie der Gartenkunst</i> (published 1779–1785), also wrote in detail on the topic of gardens and painting, but on this topic he too follows the influential treatise <i>Observations on Modern Gardening</i> (1770) by <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/68938987" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Thomas Whately (1726-1772)</a>. Hirschfeld apparently never got to see any paintings by Claude, Poussin or Dughet.</p> <p>There is universal agreement in English, French and German garden literature of the 1770s on the close connection between landscape design and painting. However, landscape design exceeds painting in terms of its expansiveness and particularly in its materials, because it is itself living, moving and changing nature. Landscape design mimics an ideal, beautiful nature, and at the same time it is nature.</p> <h2>The International Theoretical Garden Debate: 1770–1800</h2> <p>In 1712, Joseph Addison identified naturalness and rich diversity as the design principles of a garden, which should be "a Picture of the greatest variety". His emphasis on the "beautiful Wildness of Nature" instead of the "Elegancies of Art" is the opposite of French garden design.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_52_marker53"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_52">27</a></sup></span> In addition to the formal aspects, the discussion of the classical French garden by English authors in the early-18th century also had political and social-critical aspects – a bourgeois critique of court that was directed against the aristocracy – while also being an expression of anti-French resentment in British politics.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_54_marker55"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_54">28</a></sup></span> The French garden was interpreted as symbolizing courtly exploitation and repression, while the English landscape garden was equated with a liberal political system. This interpretation with its social-critical polemic sowed the seed for Europe-wide discussions about landscape design that occurred during the course of the 18th century.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_56_marker57"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_56">29</a></sup></span></p> <p>The transfer of military action into peaceful design and also the paradox of the mutually referential relationship between the fortress and the garden are demonstrated by practically all of the war heroes of the War of the Spanish Succession and their building plans after the end of the war.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_58_marker59"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_58">30</a></sup></span> Of course, by no means all of the English commanders who had been victorious against the French commissioned landscape gardens – to demonstrate the victory of English art too, as it were. <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/29153/" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="John Churchill of Marlborough (1650–1722)">John Churchill (1650–1722), 1st Duke of Marlborough</a> the victorious commander at the Second Battle of <span class="external-geo-link-container" itemscope="itemscope" itemtype="http://schema.org/Place"><a itemprop="url" class="external-geo-link" data-class="external-geo-link" href="http://d-nb.info/gnd/4025322-3">Höchstädt</a></span> (1704), commissioned Charles Bridgeman to create a regular garden around Blenheim Castle. The garden was only subsequently redesigned and enlarged by Lancelot Brown<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/view-of-blenheim-palace-and-the-bridge" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="View of Blenheim Palace and the Bridge"><img alt="Blenheim Palace mit Schloss und Brücke IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/blenheim-palace-mit-schloss-und-bruecke-img/@@images/image/thumb" title="Blenheim Palace mit Schloss und Brücke IMG"></a>. And the garden of Stowe, which was commissioned by Richard Temple who had also been victorious against the French, was also initially heavily influenced by the classical French model.</p> <p>It was only later in the 18th century and from the Seven Years' War at the latest that the English and French garden styles were regularly held up as nationalist and political metaphors<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/nature-affectation" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Nature/Affectation"><img alt="Natur/Afectation IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/natur-afectation-img/@@images/image/thumb" title="Natur/Afectation IMG"></a>.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_60_marker61"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_60">31</a></sup></span> From 1770 onward, a host of authors contributed to a controversial international debate, which was initially heavily academic, in a long series of treatises on gardening which appeared in the relevant almanacs and gazettes. The majority of these authors were not gardeners themselves, but poets, philosophers, architects, people commissioning gardens and amateur enthusiasts: the Englishmen Thomas Whately, <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/2590661" rel="noopener" target="_blank">William Chambers (1726–1796)</a>, William Mason, Horace Walpole and <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/88637860/" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Richard Payne Knight (1750–1824)</a>, the Frenchmen <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/100184045" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–1778)</a>, <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/66565253" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Claude-Henri Watelet (1718–1786)</a>, <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/14868939/" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Antoine-Nicolas Duchesne (1747–1827)</a>, Jacques Delille, <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/49226149" rel="noopener" target="_blank">René-Louis de Girardin (1735–1808)</a>, and in particular the ubiquitous German Christian Cay Lorenz Hirschfeld. The five-volume <i>Theorie der Gartenkunst</i><a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/theorie-der-gartenkunst" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Theorie der Gartenkunst"><img alt="Theorie der Gartenkunst IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/theorie-der-gartenkunst-img/@@images/image/thumb" title="Theorie der Gartenkunst IMG"></a> was published by the philosophy professor Hirschfeld between 1779 and 1785, but it was not until 1818 that the first German-language manual on the landscape garden was published in the form of the <i>Beiträge zur bildenden Gartenkunst<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/beitraege-zur-bildenden-gartenkunst" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Beiträge zur bildenden Gartenkunst"><img alt="Beiträge zur bildenden Gartenkunst IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/beitraege-zur-bildenden-gartenkunst-img/@@images/image/thumb" title="Beiträge zur bildenden Gartenkunst IMG"></a></i> by the director of the Bavarian court gardens <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/8183273/" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Friedrich Ludwig von Sckell (1750–1823)</a>. Many of the books mentioned were translated into other languages.</p> <h2>The Anglo-Chinese Garden</h2> <p>The controversy regarding the writings of the architect William Chambers and the so-called Anglo-Chinese garden is informative from the perspective of intercultural transfer. The Anglo-Chinese garden is a stylistic variant among early landscape gardens that was fed by English and French concepts and interpretations of Chinese gardens. For a short period from the early-1770s to the end of the 1780s, it was popular throughout Europe, but particularly in France<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/jardin-de-monceau" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Jardin de Monceau"><img alt="Jardin de Monceau IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/jardin-de-monceau-img/@@images/image/thumb" title="Jardin de Monceau IMG"></a>. Thereafter, it fell out of favour and the classical landscape garden as described by Brown and Repton became dominant. This early stylistic variant, which was primarily known by the French term <i>Jardin anglo-chinois</i>, elevated an eclecticism and stylistic pluralism derived from the stylistic principles of the rococo to a guiding principle. From the perspective of forms, this involved an intricate and varied sequence of small garden spaces, a mixture of geometrical and irregular elements, figurative and decorative shapes in the layout of paths and in the parterre outlines, the contrasting combination of artificial garden structures and their naturally designed surroundings, as well as effects aimed at surprising the senses.</p> <p>Through his work on Chinese architecture, art and gardens, Chambers made important contributions to the discussion about the origin and forms of the landscape garden<a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/mediainfo/kew-gardens-and-pagode" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Kew Gardens and Pagode"><img alt="Kew Gardens mit Pagode IMG" class="image-inline" src="./illustrationen/europaeische-landschaftsgarten-bilderordner/kew-garden-mit-pagode-img/@@images/image/thumb" title="Kew Gardens mit Pagode IMG"></a>.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_62_marker63"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_62">32</a></sup></span> In 1757, he published his <i>Designs of Chinese buildings ... To which is annexed a description of their Temples, Houses, Gardens &c</i>, which contained numerous illustrations and which appeared in French translation in the same year.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_64_marker65"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_64">33</a></sup></span> Chambers' other contribution to the discussion on Chinese landscape design, <i>Dissertation on Oriental Gardening</i>, was published in English in 1772 together with his <i>An Explanatory Discourse by Tan Chet-Qua</i> .... It was published in French in 1773. In the <i>Dissertation</i>, Chambers explained that the irregular garden style was invented in <span class="external-geo-link-container" itemscope="itemscope" itemtype="http://schema.org/Place"><a itemprop="url" class="external-geo-link" data-class="external-geo-link" href="http://d-nb.info/gnd/4009937-4">China </a></span>in his view. The European landscape designer – he further argued – should follow the example of the Chinese garden concept and the Chinese professional image of the gardener – landscape design as the work of the botanist, painter and philosopher:</p> <blockquote>Their Gardeners are not only Botanists, but also Painters and Philosophers .... It is not in China, as in Italy and France, where every petty Architect is a Gardener; neither is it as in another famous country, where peasants emerge from the melon grounds to commence professors; ... In China, Gardening is a distinct profession, requiring an extensive study ...<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_66_marker67"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_66">34</a></sup></span></blockquote> <p>Chambers repeatedly weaved into his texts fundamental criticisms of the supposedly artless landscape beautification of Lancelot "Capability" Brown, who achieved great fame as a landscape designer. This was an obvious attempt by an architect to defend the status of his profession and its claim to primacy in the area of landscape design – which he described as a "collateral branch of the architect's employment"<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_68_marker69"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_68">35</a></sup></span> – against the encroachment of the very famous "Capability" Brown, who had trained as a gardener, but who as an autodidact also worked as a master builder.</p> <p>Following the Chinese model, in his <i>Dissertation </i>Chambers presented a garden concept that was based on variety and contrast, and in doing so he laid the theoretical foundations for the short-lived but nonetheless influential phase of the Anglo-Chinese garden. Appearing also in <a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/threads/backgrounds/translation/mary-snell-hornby-juergen-f-schopp-translation" title="Translation">translation</a>, Chambers' works had a far-reaching international impact that among English books on gardens was only emulated by the works of Thomas Whately. The concept and the principles of the Anglo-Chinese garden thus immediately entered the Europe-wide discussion on gardens.</p> <p>The theory that the landscape garden was primarily derived from Chinese landscape art was already strongly attacked by contemporaries, for example Walpole, Mason and Hirschfeld.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_70_marker71"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_70">36</a></sup></span> In 1785, Hirschfeld offered a polemical description of the design principles of the<i> Jardin anglo-chinois à la française</i>, thereby clearly demonstrating his rejection of it:</p> <blockquote>Alles, was ein großer Park enthalten kann, soll in den engen Raum von einem Morgen Landes zusammengedrängt werden. Alles, was Asien an verschiedenen Bauarten zeigt, soll auf einem Fleck von einigen hundert Schritten nachgeahmt werden. Chinesische Misgeburten und Kiosken, die zu den Ungeheuern der neuen schwelgerischen Baukunst gehören, verdrängen die reine Einfalt der griechischen Architectur. Die Kunst der Gruppirung der Bäume auf grünen Flächen scheint noch wenig bekannt; sie stehen meist einsam, getrennt, ohne Verbindung und Beziehung, wie die Figuren auf manchen bis auf uns erhaltenen Gemälden des Alterthums. Die Bosquets sind meistens in einer gezirkelten und tändelnden Manier; oft genug noch symmetrisch angelegt, ohne die edle Freyheit der Natur, wodurch sie ihren Reiz gewinnen müssen. ... Mit Kunstwerken aller Art, besonders vermischten Gebäuden, Ruinen, Brücken, werden nicht selten die neuen Gärten überladen, und man scheint ganz den Werth des Einfachen und Natürlichen zu verkennen.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_72_marker73"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_72">37</a></sup></span></blockquote> <p>The stylistically heterogeneous <i>Fabriques </i>in the Anglo-Chinese garden, which evoked "all times and all places" – "tous les temps et tous les lieux"<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_74_marker75"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_74">38</a></sup></span> – were viewed as a fashionable backdrop by the owners who commissioned the <i>jardins anglo-chinois</i>. However, the stylistic pluralism and eclecticism of the gardens and their small architectural features was informed by an intense cosmopolitan interest on the part of an international public that was influenced by the age of the <i>Grande Encyclopédie</i> and by <a data-class="internal-link" href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/en/threads/europe-on-the-road/the-history-of-tourism/ueli-gyr-the-history-of-tourism" title="The History of Tourism: Structures on the Path to Modernity">increasing travel</a>. Enthusiasm for imaginative variation and the concept of experiential worlds that are removed from current reality and can be perceived with the senses – as expressed in the Anglo-Chinese garden – were also characteristic of the last decades of the Ancien Régime in particular.</p> <h2>Kinaesthetic Transfer within Space and Time</h2> <p>In the garden debate of the 18th century as well as in artistic depictions of gardens in theatre, literature and painting, the garden increasingly became a place that was supposed to induce different moods and individual emotional reactions. Gardens were supposed to arouse feelings, elicit emotions, keep memories alive – all of the senses of the visitor should be stimulated, not just the eyes. The complexity of the sensual experience of the garden is complemented by the possibilities for crossing boundaries in space and time. Many landscape gardens of the 18th century combined in one place historicizing staffage structures from all countries and time periods, an encyclopaedic concept that offered walkers a journey through time in their individualized perception.</p> <p>This transfer in time and space is paradigmatic of a conceptual and structural crossing of boundaries that occurred during the course of the 18th century, which was described as follows by Horace Walpole in his <i>The History of the Modern Taste in Gardening</i> (1780) in the form of a commentary on William Kent's improvement of landscape design: "He leaped the fence and saw that all nature was a garden."<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_76_marker77"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_76">39</a></sup></span> The transfer can also be understood as a manifestation of a change in media. The exemplary nature of landscape painting for the landscape garden had its intrinsic narrowly-defined, concrete limit – the frame. A work of landscape art, by contrast, goes beyond the "frame" and takes in the whole landscape: "... the supreme art of the designer consists in disposing his ground and objects into an entire landscape."<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_78_marker79"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_78">40</a></sup></span> The work of Lancelot Brown is the best example of the new concept of landscape improvement that reached far beyond the boundaries of the garden and the park, and which from the second half of the century also became popular on the continent and was imitated there.</p> <p>During the course of the 18th century, reflections on the form and status of works of landscape design and the boundaries between them and other artistic disciplines became increasingly complex. A growing number of people expressed opinions not only on the spatiality, but also on the temporality of the landscape artwork. Hirschfeld, Repton, Sckell and subsequently <a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/68973825/" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Hermann von Pückler-Muskau (1785–1871)">Prince Hermann von Pückler-Muskau (1785–1871)</a> emphasized boundary-crossing imagination as the essential characteristic of the landscape designer and "landscape gardener", who even surpasses the architect in this regard.<span class="InsertNoteMarker" id="InsertNoteID_80_marker81"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_80">41</a></sup></span> The landscape designer must be able to calculate how the appearance of the garden will change as the walker progresses through the landscape, as well as over the course of the day and the year; he must plan ahead in years and decades, and he must master kinaesthetic transfer within space and time.</p> <p class="author"><a data-class="external-link" href="http://viaf.org/viaf/2623162/" rel="noopener" target="_blank" title="Iris Lauterbach (born 1959)">Iris Lauterbach</a></p> </div> <h2>Appendix</h2> <h3>Sources</h3> <p>Carmontelle, [Louis Carrogis]: Jardin de Monceau, près de Paris, Paris 1779. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k1066592n" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k1066592n</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Castell, Robert: The Villas of the Ancients, London 1728. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.3931/e-rara-5302" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://dx.doi.org/10.3931/e-rara-5302</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Chambers, William: Designs of Chinese buildings ... To Which is Annexed a Description of Their Temples, Houses, Gardens &c, London 1757. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.3931/e-rara-10245" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://dx.doi.org/10.3931/e-rara-10245</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Chambers, William: Desseins des édifices, meubles, habits, machines, et ustenciles des Chinois ... Auxquels est ajoutée une description de leurs temples, de leurs maisons, de leurs jardins, London 1757. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/T3S524NS77NLG8Q" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/T3S524NS77NLG8Q </a>[2021-08-13]</p> <p>Chambers, William: Dissertation on Oriental Gardening, London 1772. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb10228541-1" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb10228541-1</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Chambers, William: Dissertation sur le jardinage de l'Orient, London 1772. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb10228542-6" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb10228542-6</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Delille, Jacques: Les jardins, ou l'art d'embellir les paysages, Paris 1782. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a href="http://data.onb.ac.at/rep/109A5839" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://data.onb.ac.at/rep/109A5839</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Dezallier d'Argenville, Antoine-Joseph: Die Gärtnerey So wohl In ihrer Theorie oder Betrachtung Als Praxi oder Übung, Augsburg 1731. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a data-class="external-link" href="http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:16-diglit-16060" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:16-diglit-16060</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Dezallier d'Argenville, Antoine-Joseph: La théorie et la pratique du jardinage, Paris, 2. Aufl., 1713. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:hbz:061:1-21445" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:hbz:061:1-21445</a> / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://bibdigital.rjb.csic.es/idurl/1/13523" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://bibdigital.rjb.csic.es/idurl/1/13523</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>[Dezallier d'Argenville, Antoine-Joseph]: The Theory and Practice of Gardening, London 1712, übersetzt von John James. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.85621" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.85621</a> / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://archive.org/details/theorypracticeg00DeYz" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://archive.org/details/theorypracticeg00DeYz</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Dochnahl, Friedrich Jakob: Vollständige Garten-Bibliothek, Nürnberg 1861. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb10294906-7" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb10294906-7</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Duchesne, Antoine-Nicolas: Sur la formation des jardins, Paris 1775. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a href="http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k85709v" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k85709v</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Félibien des Avaux, Jean-François: Les plans et les descriptions de deux des plus belles maisons de campagne, de Pline le Consul, Paris 1699. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://hdl.handle.net/2027/gri.ark:/13960/t9669fr39" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://hdl.handle.net/2027/gri.ark:/13960/t9669fr39</a> / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a href="http://www.archive.org/details/lesplansetlesdes00flib" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://www.archive.org/details/lesplansetlesdes00flib</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Girardin, René-Louis de: De la composition des paysages, Genf 1777. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.44756" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.44756</a> / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a href="http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k85712r" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k85712r</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Hirschfeld, Christian Cay Lorenz: Anmerkungen über die Landhäuser und die Gartenkunst, Leipzig 1773. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.86169" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.86169</a> / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb10059377-7" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb10059377-7</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Hirschfeld, Christian Cay Lorenz: Theorie der Gartenkunst, Leipzig 1779–1785, vol. 1–5. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a href="http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:16-diglit-17968" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:16-diglit-17968</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Hirschfeld, Christian Cay Lorenz: Ueber die Verwandtschaft der Gartenkunst und der Malerey, in: Gothaisches Magazin der Künste und Wissenschaften, 1, 1776, S. 41–58. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb10613499-4" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb10613499-4</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Knight, Richard Payne: The Landscape: A Didactic Poem in Three Books, 2. Auflage, London 1795. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc1.c032446145" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc1.c032446145</a> / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a href="http://www.archive.org/details/landscapedidacti00knig" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://www.archive.org/details/landscapedidacti00knig</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Langley, Batty: New Principles of Gardening, London 1728. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.53518" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.53518</a> / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a href="http://www.archive.org/details/mobot31753000819141" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://www.archive.org/details/mobot31753000819141</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Manesson Mallet, Allain: La géométrie pratique, Paris 1702, vol. 1–4. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://bibliotheque-numerique.inha.fr/idurl/1/16560" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://bibliotheque-numerique.inha.fr/idurl/1/16560</a> (vol. 1) / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://bibliotheque-numerique.inha.fr/idurl/1/16562" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://bibliotheque-numerique.inha.fr/idurl/1/16562</a> (vol. 2) / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://bibliotheque-numerique.inha.fr/idurl/1/16563" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://bibliotheque-numerique.inha.fr/idurl/1/16563</a> (vol. 3) / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://bibliotheque-numerique.inha.fr/idurl/1/16564" rel="noopener" target="_blank"> https://bibliotheque-numerique.inha.fr/idurl/1/16564</a> (vol. 4) [2021-08-13]</p> <p>[Mason, William]: An Heroic Epistle to Sir William Chambers, London 1773. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://hdl.handle.net/2027/gri.ark:/13960/t8qc2tx22" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://hdl.handle.net/2027/gri.ark:/13960/t8qc2tx22</a> / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a data-class="external-link" href="http://www.archive.org/details/heroicepistletos00maso" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://www.archive.org/details/heroicepistletos00maso</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Mason, William: The English Garden, London 1772, London 1786. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc2.ark:/13960/t28912x07" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc2.ark:/13960/t28912x07</a> / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a data-class="external-link" href="http://archive.org/details/englishgardenpoe00masoiala" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://archive.org/details/englishgardenpoe00masoiala</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Morel, Jean-Marie: Théorie des jardins, Paris 1776. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k85711d" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k85711d</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Repton, Humphrey: Bemerkungen über die Theorie sowohl, als Praxis der Landschafts-Gartenkunst, in: Allgemeines Teutsches Garten-Magazin, 1. Jahrgang (1804), elftes Stück, S. 451–460; 1. Jahrgang (1804), zwölftes Stück, S. 491–498; 2. Jahrgang (1805), erstes Stück, S. 8–21; 2. Jahrgang (1805), zweites Stück, S. 45–54. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://zs.thulb.uni-jena.de/receive/jportal_person_00041395" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://zs.thulb.uni-jena.de/receive/jportal_person_00041395</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Repton, Humphrey: Fragments on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening, London 1816. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.44823" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.44823</a> / URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.15859" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.15859</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Repton, Humphrey: Observations on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening, London 1803. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.3931/e-rara-80438" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.3931/e-rara-80438</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Repton, Humphrey: Sketches and Hints on Landscape Gardening, London 1795. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/GRI3MYTLTX2GJ86" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/GRI3MYTLTX2GJ86</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Sckell, Friedrich Ludwig von: Beiträge zur bildenden Gartenkunst, München 1818, 2. Auflage 1825. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-external"></i><a href="http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:16-diglit-16891" rel="noopener" target="_blank">http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:16-diglit-16891</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Seeley, Benton: A Description of the Gardens of Lord Viscount Cobham, at Stow in Buckinghamshire, Northampton 1744. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://books.google.de/books?id=T3lbAAAAQAAJ" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://books.google.de/books?id=T3lbAAAAQAAJ</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Spence, Joseph: Anecdotes, Observations and Characters of Books and Men, London 1820, vol. 1–2. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://hdl.handle.net/2027/nyp.33433074921564" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://hdl.handle.net/2027/nyp.33433074921564</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Stowe Gardens in Buckinghamshire Laid out by Mr. Bridgeman, Delineated in Large Plan, and Fifteen Perspective Views Drawn on the Spot by Mons. Rigaud [1739], Nachwort George B. Clarke, Nachdruck London 1987. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://academica.edu.pl/reading/readSingle?uid=15261427" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://academica.edu.pl/reading/readSingle?uid=15261427</a> (Large Plan) [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Switzer, Stephen: Ichnographia rustica, London 1718. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.24939" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.24939</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Walpole, Horace: Über die englische Gartenkunst, übersetzt von August Wilhelm Schlegel, Heidelberg 1994.</p> <p>Walpole, Horace: Notes on William Mason's 'Preface' to An Heroic Epistle to William Chambers (1773), in: Paget Toynbee (ed.): Satirical Poems by William Mason, Oxford 1926.</p> <p>Watelet, Claude-Henri: Essai sur les jardins, Paris 1774. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k1088590" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k1088590</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Whately, Thomas: L'art de former les jardins ou l'art des jardins anglois, Paris 1771. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k1115957" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k1115957</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Whately, Thomas: Observations on Modern Gardening, London 1770. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.44757" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.44757</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <h3>Literature</h3> <p>Brown, Jane: The Omnipotent Magician: Lancelot "Capability" Brown: 1716–1783, London 2011.</p> <p>Bücherei des Deutschen Gartenbaues e.V. (ed.): Bibliographie der vor 1750 erschienenen deutschen Gartenbücher, compiled by Clemens Alexander Wimmer with the assistance of Iris Lauterbach, Nördlingen 2003.</p> <p>Buttlar, Adrian von: Der Landschaftsgarten: Gartenkunst des Klassizismus und der Romantik, Cologne 1989.</p> <p>Buttlar, Adrian von: Der englische Landsitz: 1715–1760: Symbol eines liberalen Weltentwurfs, Mittenwald 1982.</p> <p>Carré, Jacques: Through French Eyes: Rigaud's Drawings of Chiswick, in: Journal of Garden History 2,2 (1982), pp. 133–142. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.1080/01445170.1982.10412399" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.1080/01445170.1982.10412399</a> [2021-07-22]</p> <p>Daniels, Stephen: Humphry Repton: Landscape Gardening and the Geography of Georgian England, New Haven, MA et al. 1999. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://archive.org/details/humphryreptonlan0000dani" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://archive.org/details/humphryreptonlan0000dani</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Dobai, Johannes: Die Kunstliteratur des Klassizismus und der Romantik in England, Bern 1974–1984, vol. 1–4.</p> <p>Gerndt, Siegmar: Idealisierte Natur: die literarische Kontroverse um den Landschaftsgarten des 18. und frühen 19. Jahrhunderts in Deutschland, Stuttgart 1981.</p> <p>Harris, John: Sir William Chambers: Knight of the Polar Star, London 1970. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://archive.org/details/sirwilliamchambe0000harr" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://archive.org/details/sirwilliamchambe0000harr</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Harris, John (ed.): The Palladian Revival: Lord Burlington, his Villa and Garden at Chiswick, New Haven, MA et al. 1994.</p> <p>Hunt, John Dixon: The Picturesque Garden in Europe, London 2003.</p> <p>Hunt, John Dixon: Garden and Grove: The Italian Renaissance Garden in the English Imagination: 1600–1750, Princeton, NJ 1986. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt19rmc47" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt19rmc47</a> [2021-07-22]</p> <p>Hunt, John Dixon: Gardens and the Picturesque: Studies in the History of Landscape Architecture, Cambridge, MA, et al. 1992. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://archive.org/details/gardenspicturesq0000hunt" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://archive.org/details/gardenspicturesq0000hunt</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Hunt, John Dixon: William Kent: Landscape Garden Designer, London 1987.</p> <p>Hunt, John Dixon et al. (eds.): The Genius of the Place: The English Landscape Garden 1620–1820, Cambridge, MA. et al. 1988. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://archive.org/details/geniusofplaceeng00hunt" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://archive.org/details/geniusofplaceeng00hunt</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Jacques, David: On the Supposed Chineseness of the English Landscape Garden, in: Garden History 18 (1990), pp. 180–191. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.2307/1586940" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.2307/1586940</a> [2021-07-22]</p> <p>Lauterbach, Iris: "Faire céder l'art à la nature": Natürlichkeit in der Gartenkunst um 1700, in: Christoph Kampmann et al. (eds.): Neue Modelle im Alten Europa: Traditionsbruch und Innovation als Herausforderung in der Frühen Neuzeit, Cologne et al. 2012, pp. 176–193. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.7788/boehlau.9783412214692.176" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.7788/boehlau.9783412214692.176</a> [2021-07-22]</p> <p>Lauterbach, Iris: Der französische Garten am Ende des Ancien Régime: "Schöne Ordnung" und "geschmackvolles Ebenmaß", Worms 1987 (Grüne Reihe 9).</p> <p>Lauterbach, Iris: Garten und Festung: Motive und Wechselwirkungen einer utopischen Beziehung, in: Volker Mende et al. (eds.): Festungen in Gärten: Gärten in Festungen, Regensburg 2015 (Festungsforschung 6), pp. 34–45.</p> <p>Lauterbach, Iris: Gärtner, virtuoso, Gartenkünstler: Zum Berufsbild des Gartenarchitekten in der Frühen Neuzeit, in: Winfried Nerdinger (ed.): Der Architekt: Geschichte und Gegenwart eines Berufsstands, Ausstellungskatalog München, Munich et al. 2012, pp. 726–743.</p> <p>Manwaring, Elizabeth Wheeler: Italian Landscape in Eighteenth Century England: A Study Chiefly of the Influence of Claude Lorrain and Salvator Rosa on English Taste 1700–1800, New York et al. 1925.</p> <p>Schepers, Wolfgang: Hirschfelds Theorie der Gartenkunst 1779–1785, Worms 1980.</p> <p>Stroud, Dorothy: Capability Brown, London 1975. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://archive.org/details/capabilitybrown0000stro" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://archive.org/details/capabilitybrown0000stro</a> [2021-08-13]</p> <p>Weiss, Thomas (ed.): Sir William Chambers und der Englisch-chinesische Garten, Stuttgart 1997.</p> <p>Willis, Peter: Charles Bridgeman and the English Landscape Garden, Newcastle upon Tyne 2002.</p> <p>Willis, Peter: Jacques Rigaud's Drawings of Stowe in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in: Eighteenth-Century Studies 6,1 (1972), pp. 85–98. URL: <i class="glyphicon link-https"></i><a href="https://doi.org/10.2307/3031563" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.2307/3031563</a> [2021-07-22]</p> <p>Wimmer, Clemens Alexander: Geschichte der Gartentheorie, Darmstadt 1989.</p> <p>Woodbridge, Kenneth: The Stourhead Landscape: Wiltshire, London 1995.</p> <h3>Notes</h3> <ol id="InsertNote_NoteList" type="1"> <li id="InsertNoteID_0"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_0_marker1">^</a></sup> Hunt, Grove 1986; Hunt, Genius 1988.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_2"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_2_marker3">^</a></sup> Repton, Bemerkungen 1804, elftes Stück, on this: p. 452; see idem, Sketches 1795; idem, Observations 1803; idem, Fragments 1816.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_4"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_4_marker5">^</a></sup> Hirschfeld, Theorie 1782, vol. 4, 1782, vol. 4, p. 3.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_6"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_6_marker7">^</a></sup> Hirschfeld, Theorie 1782, vol. 4, 1782, p. 9 ("new taste of the British, which banished regularity and uniformity, and summoned the true beauty of nature into gardens", transl. by N. Williams).</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_8"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_8_marker9">^</a></sup> See Dochnahl, Garten-Bibliothek 1861; Bücherei, Bibliographie 2003; Wimmer, Gartentheorie 1989; Dobai, Kunstliteratur 1974–1982; Lauterbach, Der französische Garten 1987.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_10"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_10_marker11">^</a></sup> See Lauterbach, Faire céder 2012.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_12"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_12_marker13">^</a></sup> See [Dezallier], Theory 1712, translated by John James, and further editions in 1728 and 1743.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_14"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_14_marker15">^</a></sup> Dezallier, Théorie 1713, p. 18; Dezallier, Gärtnerey 1731, p. 23.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_16"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_16_marker17">^</a></sup> See Hunt, Grove 1986; Hunt, Genius 1988.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_18"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_18_marker19">^</a></sup> See Félibien des Avaux, Plans 1699; Castell, Villas 1728; Lauterbach, Faire céder 2012.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_20"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_20_marker21">^</a></sup> See Hunt, Kent 1987.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_22"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_22_marker23">^</a></sup> Spence, Anecdotes 1820, vol. 1, p. 252.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_24"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_24_marker25">^</a></sup> See Lauterbach, Gärtner 2012.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_26"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_26_marker27">^</a></sup> See Manwaring, Landscape 1925.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_28"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_28_marker29">^</a></sup> Mason, Garden 1786, p. 10.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_30"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_30_marker31">^</a></sup> Mason, Garden 1786, p. 11.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_32"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_32_marker33">^</a></sup> See Manwaring, Landscape 1925; Hunt, Grove 1986.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_34"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_34_marker35">^</a></sup> See Hunt, Kent 1987.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_36"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_36_marker37">^</a></sup> See Hunt, Kent 1987.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_38"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_38_marker39">^</a></sup> See Harris, Chiswick 1994.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_40"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_40_marker41">^</a></sup> See Seeley, Stowe 1744; Stroud, Brown 1975; Buttlar, Landsitz 1982; Willis, Bridgeman 2002.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_42"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_42_marker43">^</a></sup> Stroud, Brown 1975.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_44"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_44_marker45">^</a></sup> Stowe Gardens [1739]; Willis, Rigaud 1972; Carré, Rigaud 1982.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_46"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_46_marker47">^</a></sup> See Woodbridge, Stourhead 1995.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_48"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_48_marker49">^</a></sup> Mason, Garden 1786, p. 4.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_50"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_50_marker51">^</a></sup> Walpole, Notes 1926, p. 43.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_52"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_52_marker53">^</a></sup> Addison, The Spectator 477, 6 September 1712, p. 19, quoted from Hunt, Genius 1988, p. 146.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_54"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_54_marker55">^</a></sup> See Buttlar, Landsitz 1982.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_56"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_56_marker57">^</a></sup> See Lauterbach, Der französische Garten 1987.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_58"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_58_marker59">^</a></sup> See Lauterbach, Festung 2015.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_60"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_60_marker61">^</a></sup> See Lauterbach, Der französische Garten 1987.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_62"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_62_marker63">^</a></sup> See Harris, Chambers 1970; Weiss, Chambers 1997.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_64"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_64_marker65">^</a></sup> A digital copy of the French edition with the title <i>Desseins des édifices, meubles, habits, machines, et ustenciles des Chinois ... Auxquels est ajoutée une description de leurs temples, de leurs maisons, de leurs jardins ... </i>is available under: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/DLDecArts.ChambersDesseins [07/06/2017].</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_66"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_66_marker67">^</a></sup> Chambers, Dissertation on Oriental Gardening 1772, p. 11.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_68"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_68_marker69">^</a></sup> Chambers, Dissertation on Oriental Gardening 1772, Preface, p. III.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_70"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_70_marker71">^</a></sup> See Jacques, Chineseness 1990.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_72"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_72_marker73">^</a></sup> Hirschfeld, Theorie 1785, vol. 5, pp. 264f. ("Everything that a large park can hold is supposed to be crammed together in an acre of land. All of the different types of buildings that Asia has produced are to be imitated in the space of a few hundred paces. The Chinese deformities and kiosks that are among the monstrosities of the new opulent building style are displacing the pure simplicity of Greek architecture. There appears to be almost total ignorance of the art of grouping trees together on green areas. Instead, they usually stand alone, separate, without any connection or relationship, like the figures in some of the paintings of antiquity that have survived down to the present. The bosquets are mostly arranged in a tacky circular manner. They are often even arranged symmetrically, without the noble freedom of nature that gives them their charm. ... The new gardens are often overcrowded with artworks of all kinds, particularly mixtures of buildings, ruins and bridges, and the value of the simple and the natural appears to be completely ignored." transl. by N. Williams)</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_74"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_74_marker75">^</a></sup> Carmontelle, Monceau 1779, p. 4.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_76"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_76_marker77">^</a></sup> Walpole, Gardening 1782, quoted from Hunt, Genius 1988, p. 313.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_78"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_78_marker79">^</a></sup> Quotation from 1762 from Hunt, Genius 1988, p. 99.</li> <li id="InsertNoteID_80"><sup><a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800#InsertNoteID_80_marker81">^</a></sup> For example, see Hirschfeld, Verwandtschaft 1776.</li> </ol> </div> <div id="article_metadata"><br> <div id="license" class="smalltype"> <span class="cc-image-link"> <a class="de" rel="license" href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/deed.de"><img alt="Creative Commons Lizenzvertrag" style="border-width:0" src="https://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-nd/3.0/80x15.png"></a> <a class="en" rel="license" href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/deed.en"><img alt="Creative Commons Lizenzvertrag" style="border-width:0" src="https://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-nd/3.0/80x15.png"></a> </span> <br> <span class="de">Dieser Text ist lizensiert unter</span> <span class="en">This text is licensed under</span>: <span class="licence"><span class="selected-option">CC by-nc-nd 3.0 Germany - Attribution, Noncommercial, No Derivative Works</span></span> </div> <hr> <p> <span id="translator"><span class="de">Übersetzt von:</span><span class="en">Translated by:</span> <span id="form-widgets-translator" class="text-widget textline-field">Niall Williams</span></span><br> <span id="publisher"><span class="de">Fachherausgeber:</span><span class="en">Editor:</span> <span id="form-widgets-publisher" class="text-widget textline-field">Hubertus Kohle</span> </span><br> <span id="copyeditor"><span class="de">Redaktion:</span><span class="en">Copy Editor:</span> <span id="form-widgets-copyeditor" class="text-widget textline-field">Claudia Falk</span> </span><br> </p> <div class="document-paths-container"> <strong><span class="de">Eingeordnet unter:</span><span class="en">Filed under:</span></strong> <div class="document-paths"> <div> <ul class="path breadcrumbs"> <li> <a href="https://ego-ploneui.uni-trier.de">Home</a> </li> <li> <span class="path-separator">→</span> en </li> <li> <span class="path-separator">→</span> Threads </li> <li> <span class="path-separator">→</span> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes">Models and Stereotypes</a> </li> <li> <span class="path-separator">→</span> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia">Anglophilia</a> </li> <li> <span class="path-separator">→</span> <a href="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/anglophilia/iris-lauterbach-the-european-landscape-garden-ca-1710-1800">European Landscape Garden</a> </li> </ul> </div> </div> </div> <hr> <div class="relatedItems"> </div> <h3 id="indices">Indices</h3> <div id="ddcarea"> DDC: <span id="ddcs"><a href="/search?DDC=630&portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe" class="ddc"> 630</a> <a class="de" href="http://deweysearchde.pansoft.de/webdeweysearch/executeSearch.html?query=630">[Info <img class="external_link_icon" src="/_theme/img/external_link_icon.png" alt="external link"> ]</a> <a class="en" href="http://deweysearchde.pansoft.de/webdeweysearch/executeSearch.html?query=630">[Info <img class="external_link_icon" src="/_theme/img/external_link_icon.png" alt="external link"> ]</a><a href="/search?DDC=710&portal_type=Site&Title=freigabe" class="ddc"> 710</a> <a class="de" href="http://deweysearchde.pansoft.de/webdeweysearch/executeSearch.html?query=710">[Info <img class="external_link_icon" src="/_theme/img/external_link_icon.png" alt="external link"> ]</a> <a class="en" href="http://deweysearchde.pansoft.de/webdeweysearch/executeSearch.html?query=710">[Info <img class="external_link_icon" src="/_theme/img/external_link_icon.png" alt="external link"> ]</a></span> </div> <br> <div class="geo-links-container"></div> <div id="map" style="height:450px;"></div> <script src="https://openlayers.org/api/2.13.1/OpenLayers.js"></script> <script> map = new OpenLayers.Map("map"); var markers = new OpenLayers.Layer.Markers( "Markers" ); map.addLayer(markers); map.addLayer(new OpenLayers.Layer.OSM()); var fromProjection = new OpenLayers.Projection("EPSG:4326"); // Transform from WGS 1984 var toProjection = new OpenLayers.Projection("EPSG:900913"); // to Spherical Mercator Projection var position = new OpenLayers.LonLat(8.247253,49.992863).transform( fromProjection, toProjection); map.setCenter(position, 4 ); </script> <hr> <h3><span class="de">Zitierempfehlung</span><span class="en">Citation</span></h3> <p class="box" id="citation"> <span class="articleauthor"><span class="reversedallauthors"><span class="reversedauthor">Lauterbach, Iris</span><span></span></span></span>: <span class="doc_title">The European Landscape Garden, ca. 1710–1800</span>, in: <span class="de">Europäische Geschichte Online (EGO), hg. vom <span class="leibniz-addition">Leibniz-</span>Institut für Europäische Geschichte (IEG), Mainz </span> <span class="en">European History Online (EGO), published by the <span class="leibniz-addition">Leibniz </span>Institute of European History (IEG), Mainz </span> <span class="publicationsdate">2017-07-03</span>. URL: <a id="primaryurl" href="">https://www.ieg-ego.eu/<span class="unique">lauterbachi-2012</span>-<span class="articlelanguage">en</span></a> URN: <a id="primaryurn" href=""><span id="urn">urn:nbn:de:0159-2017062338</span></a> <span class="de">[JJJJ-MM-TT]</span><span class="en">[YYYY-MM-DD]</span>. </p> <p class="de smalltype">Bitte setzen Sie beim Zitieren dieses Beitrages hinter der URL-Angabe in Klammern das Datum Ihres letzten Besuchs dieser Online-Adresse ein. Beim Zitieren einer bestimmten Passage aus dem Beitrag bitte zusätzlich die Nummer des Textabschnitts angeben, z.B. 2 oder 1-4.</p> <p class="en smalltype">When quoting this article please add the date of your last retrieval in brackets after the url. When quoting a certain passage from the article please also insert the corresponding number(s), for example 2 or 1-4.</p> <div id="ppnarea"> <br> <span class="de">Titelexport aus</span><span class="en">Export citation from</span>: <span id="ppn"><a title="incl. export options into standard citation formats" href="http://cbsopac.rz.uni-frankfurt.de/DB=2.1/PPNSET?PPN=404949045"><span class="de">HeBIS-Online-Katalog</span><span class="en">HeBIS Online Catalogue</span> <img class="external_link_icon" src="/_theme/img/external_link_icon.png" alt="external link"></a> </span> <span id="oclc"></span> </div> <hr class="double"> <div class="social-buttons"> <div class="email-button-container"> <a href="#" class="email-button social-button"><span title="Recommend via E-Mail" class="en">E-Mail</span><span title="Empfehlung per E-Mail" class="de">E-Mail</span></a> </div> <div class="recensio-button-container"> <span class="print"><span class="en">Comment on this entry at recensio.net</span><span class="de">Diesen Beitrag bei recensio.net kommentieren</span>: </span> <a href="#" class="recensio-button social-button"><span title="Comment on this entry at recensio.net" class="en">Comment</span><span title="Diesen Beitrag bei recensio.net kommentieren" class="de">Kommentieren</span></a> </div> <div class="tweet-button-container"> <div class="tweet-2click-dummy"><img src="/_theme/img/dummy_twitter.png" title="Click here to activate Twitter button" alt="Twitter" class="en"><img src="/_theme/img/dummy_twitter.png" title="Hier klicken um den Twitter Button zu aktivieren" alt="Twitter" class="de"></div></div> <div class="gplus-button-container"> <div class="gplus-2click-dummy"><img src="/_theme/img/dummy_gplus.png" title="Click here to activate +1 button" alt="+1" class="en"><img src="/_theme/img/dummy_gplus.png" title="Hier klicken um den +1 Button zu aktivieren" alt="+1" class="de"></div></div> <div class="fb-button-container"> <div class="fb-2click-dummy"><img src="/_theme/img/dummy_facebook_en.png" title="Click here to activate Facebook button" alt="Facebook" class="en"><img src="/_theme/img/dummy_facebook.png" title="Hier klicken um den Facebook Button zu aktivieren" alt="Facebook" class="de"></div></div> </div> <!-- social-buttons --> <div class="clear"> </div> </div> </div> <!-- Content --> <div class="grid_2 hyphenate" id="rightsidebar"> <div id="mediabar"> <ul> </ul> </div> </div> <div class="clear"> </div> <div class="grid_9"> <div id="breadcrumb0" class="breadCrumb module"> <div id="breadcrumbs-1"> </div> </div> </div> </div> <!-- main --> <div class="clear"> </div> <div id="footer" class="grid_9"> <ul id="bottommenu" class="smalltype"> <li class="first"> <a href="/en/ego">About EGO</a> </li> <li> <a href="/en/ego/contact">Contact</a> </li> <li> <a href="/en/ego/impressum">Legal Details</a> </li> <li> <a href="/en/ego/privacy">Privacy</a> </li> <li class="last">ISSN 2192-7405</li> <li> <a id="twitterlogo" href="http://www.twitter.com/ieg_ego"><img width="58" height="20" src="/_theme/img/twitter_button.png" alt="Follow ieg_ego on Twitter" title="Follow ieg_ego on Twitter"></a> </li> <li class="gplus-2click-dummy" data-url="http://www.ieg-ego.eu"> <img alt="+1" title="Click here to activate +1 button" src="/_theme/img/dummy_gplus.png"> </li> <li class="fb-2click-dummy" data-url="http://www.ieg-ego.eu"> <img alt="Facebook" title="Click here to activate Facebook button" src="/_theme/img/dummy_facebook_en.png"> </li> </ul> <span class="print">http://www.ieg-ego.eu ISSN 2192-7405</span> </div> <!-- footer --> </div> <!-- wrapper --> <script src="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/js/plugins.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script> <!-- <script src="js/jquery.easing.1.3.js" type="text/javascript" ></script> <script src="js/jquery.jBreadCrumb.1.1.js" type="text/javascript" ></script> <script src="js/sexylightbox.v2.3.jquery.min.js" type="text/javascript" ></script> <script src="js/jquery.TableOfContents.js" type="text/javascript" ></script> <script src="js/jquery.i18n.js" type="text/javascript" ></script>--> <!-- <script src="js/hyphenator4.4.0_de_en.js" type="text/javascript"></script>--> <script src="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/js/jquery.scrollUp.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="https://apis.google.com/js/plusone.js"> { parsetags: 'explicit' } </script> <script src="https://www.ieg-ego.eu/_theme/js/ego_global.js" type="text/javascript"></script> <!-- Matomo --> <script type="text/javascript"> var _paq = window._paq = window._paq || []; /* tracker methods like "setCustomDimension" should be called before "trackPageView" */ _paq.push(['trackPageView']); _paq.push(['enableLinkTracking']); (function() { var u="https://tcdhpiwik.uni-trier.de/"; _paq.push(['setTrackerUrl', u+'matomo.php']); _paq.push(['setSiteId', '11']); var d=document, g=d.createElement('script'), s=d.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; g.type='text/javascript'; g.async=true; g.src=u+'matomo.js'; s.parentNode.insertBefore(g,s); })(); </script> <!-- End Matomo Code --> </body> </html>
Actions
Delete
List Pages