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Chinese Garden
Garden building is considered a chief component of Chinese
culture. The chinese garden has a long history.It first appeared in
the form of a hunting preserve for emperors and nobles in the 11th century
B.C during the Zhou Dynasty. Druing the Qin and Han dynasties,those
natural preserves were made more beautiful and became places of recreation
for imperial families.
Garden
building saw its heyday during the Ming and Qing dynasties
and the imperial garden Yuanming Yuan was regarded as a masterpiece
in this period. Different from the classical European gardens,
in which geometric patterns dominate, Chinese gardens are
made to resemble natural landscapes on a smaller scale. Traditional
Chinese gardens fall into three categories, namely, imperial,
private, and landscape gardens.
Most imperial gardens are located in north china: Beihai
park; the Summer Palace; the Imperial Garden of the Forbidden
City in Beijing; The Imperial Summer Resort in Chengde, Hebei
Province; and Huaqing Palace in Xian Shaanxi Province. Imperial
gardens occupy large areas. The summer Palace, for instance,has
an area of 290 hectares while the Imperial Summer Resort in
Chengde, which covers more than 560 hectares, is the largest
imperial garden in China. Most of these gardens have three
sections which serve administrative, residential, and recreational
purposes. In
large imperial gardens, the main buildings are connected by
an imaginary line in the middle of the garden on a norht-south
axis. Other buildings scattered among hills and waters are
linked by subordinate lines, forming a well-designed symmetry
and adding beauty to the chief architecural complex.
Other characteristics of the imperial gardens are coloured
painitings, screen walls, stone tablets, bridges, man-made hills and
lakes and ingeniously-designed buildings. Decorated archways abound
in those gardens.
Most private gardens are found in the south, especially
in cities south of the Yangtse River. Private gardent were mostly built
at one side or the back of the residential houses. In almost every garden.
there is a large space in the garden set in a landscape of artistically
arranged rockeries, ponds, pavilions, bridages, trees, and flowers.
Surrounding the beautiful scene are small open areas partitioned by
corridors or walls with latticed windows or beautifully shaped doors.
Buildings in the garden were used for receiving guests,holding banquets,
reading, or writing poetry, They are open on all sides and are oftn
situated near the water. The winding corridors connect various buildings
and also provide a covered veranda as shelter from the rain and shade
from the sun.
Suzhou,
known as the home of gardens,displays the most and the best
traditional private gardens in china. Among them, the Pavilion
of the Surging Waves is known for its rustic charm, Lion Grove
for its strang rockeries the Humble Administrater's Garden
for its tranquil waters and elegant buildings,and the Garden
for Lingerring In for its ancient architectural art and the
arrangement of hills, waters and plants. They re the examples
of the garden styles of the song, Yunan, Ming and Qing dynasties
respectively.
Gardens in Yangzhou are characterized by their architectural
style and artistic rockeries, whereas Guangdong style gardens are distinguished
by large ponds, brightly coloured buildings, and luxuriant plants.
Landscape
gardens are different and are place for public recreation.
The landscape garden mainly contains natural scenes, so it
looks more natural than artificial. Good examples include
the ten West Lake scenes in Hangzhou, the twenty-four Slim
West Lake scenes in yangzhou. and the eight Daming Lake scenes
in Jinan.
Many famous poets and painters contributed
greatly to the development of landscape gardens. They either
left poetic inscriptions for those gardens, or designed many
of the gardens themselves. In order to commemorate those poets
and painters,later generations had their poems and inscriptions
engraved on tablets, pavilions, or pagodas, thus enriching
and ispiring visitors.
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