- Byzantine gardens
Byzantium undoubtedly occupies an important place in the history of garden design. The city, which becameIstanbul , was capital of theEastern Roman Empire and survived for a thousand years after the fall of theWestern Roman Empire . The gardens of Byzantium were however mostly destroyed after the fifteenth century Turkish conquest.Byzantine gardens were based largely on Roman ideas emphasizing elaborate
mosaic designs, a typical classical feature of neatly arrayed trees as well as man made structures such as fountains and smallshrines which gradually grew to become more elaborate as time progressed. Byzantine gardens developed a distinct style of their own however, drawing upon Oriental, and in particularIslamic influences of the time from the near East and North Africa. Some elements of Moorish influence are somewhat tangible, particularly concerning the aforementioned fountain design, but alsoPersian Gardens had a distinct influence, emphasizing a common theme in Byzantine Culture, that of the clash of colours.Little else is known about Byzantine gardens however, and very few references, let alone entire Treatises exist on the subject. The Byzantines, like their Greco-Roman predecessors, attached great importantance to such matters of
aesthetics , but throughout the whole ofGreco-Roman History theGarden never seemed to occupy the place of prestige in its culture that it occupied in the East, as their roots are largely drawn from the more practical purposes ofOlive Tree groves.ee also
*History of Gardening
*Persian Gardens
*Roman gardens External links
* [http://www.gardenvisit.com/got/5/islamic_garden_history.htm Marie-Luise Gothein's history of "Byzantine Gardens"]
* [http://www.doaks.org/LIBGE.html Byzantine Garden Culture]
* [http://livingpast.com/garden.html Private gardens in Byzantine Constantinople]
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