Landscape architecture in the augustan period

Landscape architecture in Victorian England was the opposite of the regular and entirely planned gardens of the previous age. The gardens were now a blend of nature- and man-made, with evergreen trees, streams of water, lakes or waterfalls, undulating slopes and hills, as well as Gothic follies and other precisely-placed artifacts that contrasted with the perfect imperfection of nature, or so called landscaped wilderness.

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