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  2. Sakuteiki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sakuteiki

    Sakuteiki (作庭記, literally, Records of Garden Making) is the oldest published Japanese text on garden-making. It was most likely the work of Tachibana Toshitsuna. [1] Sakuteiki is most likely the oldest garden planning text in the world. It was written in the mid-to-late 11th century. [2]

  3. Japanese garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_garden

    Japanese gardens, typically a section of a larger garden, continue to be popular in the West, and many typical Japanese garden plants, such as cherry trees and the many varieties of Acer palmatum or Japanese maple, are also used in all types of garden, giving a faint hint of the style to very many gardens.

  4. Japanese dry garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_dry_garden

    The Japanese dry garden (枯山水, karesansui) or Japanese rock garden, often called a Zen garden, is a distinctive style of Japanese garden. It creates a miniature stylized landscape through carefully composed arrangements of rocks, water features, moss, pruned trees and bushes, and uses gravel or sand that is raked to represent ripples in ...

  5. Garden design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_design

    A formal garden in the Persian and European garden design traditions is rectilinear and axial in design. The equally formal garden, without axial symmetry (asymmetrical) or other geometries, is the garden design tradition of Chinese and Japanese gardens. The Zen garden of rocks, moss and raked gravel is an example. The Western model is an ...

  6. The Craft of Gardens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Craft_of_Gardens

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

  7. Tsubo-niwa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsubo-niwa

    Other spellings of tsubo-niwa translate to "container garden", and a tsubo-niwa may differ in size from the tsubo unit of measurement. [1] A number of different terms exist to describe the function of townhouse gardens. Courtyard gardens of all sizes are referred to as naka-niwa, "inner gardens"; [3] gardens referred to as tōri-niwa (通り庭 ...

  8. List of horticulture and gardening books and publications

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_horticulture_and...

    This list of horticulture and gardening books includes notable gardening books and journals, which can to aid in research and for residential gardeners in planning, planting, harvesting, and maintaining gardens. Gardening books encompass a variety of subjects from garden design, vegetable gardens, perennial gardens, to shade gardens.

  9. Kenroku-en - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenroku-en

    Kenroku-en was developed from the 1620s to the 1840s by the Maeda clan, the daimyōs (feudal lords) who ruled the former Kaga Domain.. While the date of initial development of the garden that would become known as Kenrokuen is rather unclear, one version of the garden's origins can perhaps be marked by the completion of the Tatsumi water channel in 1632 by Maeda Toshitsune, [5] the third ...